book data
1376 ratings, 3.61 average rating, 125 reviews
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published
2000
(first published 1900)
by Broadview Press
binding
Paperback, 455 pages
isbn
1551111721
(isbn13: 9781551111728)
description
When Lord Jim first appeared in 1900, many took Joseph Conrad to task for couching an entire novel in the form of an extended conversation--a r...more
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avg 3.61
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
anyone
So much to say about this novel. One one hand it's an adventure tale, but on the other it's a harbinger of the modern novel, told from various points of view, creating an almost cubist vision of one man's struggle with guilt and morality.
The prose is beautiful and the characters fascinating, every one of them plagued by their own inner demons. Jim, himself, is almost a younger version of Kurtz from Heart of Darkness, but my favorite characters were probably Brierly, the forboding sea cap...more
The prose is beautiful and the characters fascinating, every one of them plagued by their own inner demons. Jim, himself, is almost a younger version of Kurtz from Heart of Darkness, but my favorite characters were probably Brierly, the forboding sea cap...more
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Read in September, 2007
recommends it for:
white men and those who want to understand them
Having read this book, I am still trying to grin more like its characters, with the romanticism of purpose and one's humbleness before it. The book is solidly placed from the perspective of imperialist participation. It asks questions of its participants, and why they travel, why they imbue themselves with honor and the duty of origin. There is a good deal of investigation of the hard issues of dreams and of heart. Also, the end is awesome.
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COnrad is hard to read. I almost toiled halfway through the book when suddenly I thought to myself:" This is not a bad novel". It was not a bad novel at all. In fact I became so interested in the rest of the novel that I could'nt put it down. I still have problems reading Conrad and would'nt try another of his works but I admit that I loved the way Jim was in conflict with himself all the time and COnrads approach to the matter
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bookshelves:
general-fiction,
historical-fiction
Disappointed.
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Read in August, 1997
It's hard to decide which of Lord Jim and Heart of Darkness are superior; I give them both five stars for being absolute bulwarks of English literature (written by a Pole!) shoring up the flatulent Romanticist period (ugh, agrarianism! double ugh, pre-raphaelites!), and setting the stage (along with Tolstoy, Baudelaire, Flaubert, Mallarmé, Ibsen and Schopenhauer) for the great shift into Modernism. This was almost certainly t...more
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Read in March, 2007
read this not long ago with a group of enthusiastic students (enthusiastic for extra credit). jim is a complex character, full of heroic, sadly misdirected, energy. his story is relayed to us through the narration of captain marlow (same narrator as heart of darkness) who first hears the story himself then discovers and befriends young jim.
the opening plot sequence resonates in my mind with a parallel sequence that opens mcewan's enduring love- one fateful choice, one in which the protagoni...more
the opening plot sequence resonates in my mind with a parallel sequence that opens mcewan's enduring love- one fateful choice, one in which the protagoni...more
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There's a certain school of novel-writing I've always loved, which thrived around the beginning of the 20th century. It's a style characterized by narrators who are trying to recount a story that they understand only incompletely and who piece together bits of hearsay, guesses, and a few scraps of first-hand knowledge, into a narrative about some largely-mysterious third party. The general format goes: "X was an extraordinary person who I hardly knew, but here is my attempt at recounting th...more
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Like The Heart of Darkness, most of this book is narrated by Conrad's character Marlow. In Lord Jim, however, this device serves a more complex purpose. In the first place, Marlow isn't a particularly important character in this novel the way he is in Heart of Darkness. He's a witness to a few key moments, but he isn't present for the majority of the action. This leads to the second point, which is that Marlow's narration is usually filtered through a third character, so...more
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2008,
audio,
classic
Read in January, 2008
recommends it for:
people who 'get' Conrad
I did this one as an audiobook (but *NOT* the version goodreads implies - they 'combined' editions and the audio version I listened to is gone. It's the version from librivox.org - if you haven't heard of it, but like audio books, I recommend the site - free versions of public domain books).
The version I listened to is downloadable at http://www.archive.org/details...
Anyhoo, I listened to many sections twice, ...more
The version I listened to is downloadable at http://www.archive.org/details...
Anyhoo, I listened to many sections twice, ...more
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Read in January, 2008
Jove! This book was ruined by being a story-within-a-story! Sometimes I had to search back and decode the quotation marks to discover whether the speaker was Marlow or Marlow relating something that Jim said. I don't know why Conrad decided to present Jim's story through Marlow, but it really distanced me emotionally from Jim's struggles. This is mostly (barring the end) told by Marlow to a small audience at a distance of some years and I found myself questioning whether he left things out or em...more
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How do you feel when the others who have not been in your situation, judge you, and while you think you’ve done the right thing, they simply don’t think so.
جیم دریانوردی خبره، شجاع و صادق است. اما او هم مثل همه ی دیگران یک انسان است، با ضعف ها و ترس هایش. جیم خوش ندارد او را جز آنچه هست بدانند و باور کنند. چه هنگامی که کشتی در حال غرق شدن را با ...more
جیم دریانوردی خبره، شجاع و صادق است. اما او هم مثل همه ی دیگران یک انسان است، با ضعف ها و ترس هایش. جیم خوش ندارد او را جز آنچه هست بدانند و باور کنند. چه هنگامی که کشتی در حال غرق شدن را با ...more
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Read in January, 1999
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Read in September, 2008
This is one of the few books i read twice, and my review is a little bit of a spoiler.
Lord Jim is all about "honor" and the message is interesting. The story revolves around a dark moment in Jim's past that's deeply disturbing to all good men who hear about it. Marlow, the narrator, an accomplice in the Jim's quest for redemption/ shamed self-exile from civilization, seems to form his close bond with Jim because he fears that a tragedy similar to Jim's could one day decimate a...more
Lord Jim is all about "honor" and the message is interesting. The story revolves around a dark moment in Jim's past that's deeply disturbing to all good men who hear about it. Marlow, the narrator, an accomplice in the Jim's quest for redemption/ shamed self-exile from civilization, seems to form his close bond with Jim because he fears that a tragedy similar to Jim's could one day decimate a...more
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It is not Justice the servant of men, but accident, hazard, Fortune—the ally of patient Time—that holds an even and scrupulous balance.
Henceforth they would be labeled as having passed through this and that place, and so would be their luggage. They would cherish this distinction of their persons, and preserve the gummed tickets on their portmanteaus as documentary evidence.
A certain readiness to perish is not so very rare, but it is seldom that you meet men whose souls, steeled in t...more
Henceforth they would be labeled as having passed through this and that place, and so would be their luggage. They would cherish this distinction of their persons, and preserve the gummed tickets on their portmanteaus as documentary evidence.
A certain readiness to perish is not so very rare, but it is seldom that you meet men whose souls, steeled in t...more
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I didn't read the paperback, I read a hardcover that is part of the 100 best books ever written by Easton Press. Anyway this is close enough.
I found the story line fairly fascinating and wondering what would happen next. I also found myself confused a lot an having to reread a lot of things to understand who was really being talked about or what was actually happening.
Jim finds himself a shiphand adn wanting to be a rescuer of some kind but when disaster happens he finds himself i so much ...more
I found the story line fairly fascinating and wondering what would happen next. I also found myself confused a lot an having to reread a lot of things to understand who was really being talked about or what was actually happening.
Jim finds himself a shiphand adn wanting to be a rescuer of some kind but when disaster happens he finds himself i so much ...more
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recommends it for:
readers of difficult classics
I read this book for two reasons:
1) It was on my roommate's shelf and I needed something to read.
2) It was made into a movie starring Peter O'Toole, one of the greatest actors to ever live.
Hey, what better reason to read a book, right? (Heh heh)
I started actually reading it and got about three chapters in before I realized that it was going to put an end to my reading streak. So I got the audio book.
And it put an end to my reading streak.
Listening to the audio book actually too...more
1) It was on my roommate's shelf and I needed something to read.
2) It was made into a movie starring Peter O'Toole, one of the greatest actors to ever live.
Hey, what better reason to read a book, right? (Heh heh)
I started actually reading it and got about three chapters in before I realized that it was going to put an end to my reading streak. So I got the audio book.
And it put an end to my reading streak.
Listening to the audio book actually too...more
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Read in November, 2008
recommends it for:
Everybody
A very good book. I am a big fan of Joseph Conrad's writing style. He sets a scene, and unveils actions how they occur, without totally explaining what is going on until after the fact. It brings the reader into the scene, from a viewpoint not of an observer, but more of a participant. The theme of the book is the search for redemption after a loss of honor for Jim, and the lengths he goes to both protect himself from his past and renew his own sense of self worth are both inspiring and a li...more
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Read in April, 2008
After reading "Heart of Darkness", I found this book to be somewhat dull, not having the amount of action or the great passages of "Darkness." Overall, even though it moves slow, it's a pretty decent read. I didn't like the way that the story of Jim is told through Marlow, in the form of a story being told to a group of people. Without the conversation broken up into individual paragraphs and sentences, it is often very hard to follow or to know who is saying what. It's tale...more
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in July, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Read in September, 2008
Conrad is a master of metaphor. At times I would smile with either mirth or bitterness at how well he can paint a portrait of the human condition. Truly one of the masters of prose. I find it hard to accept, though reluctantly I do, that I see the world much as Conrad does. That, honor, morality, the holding to of ideals, do not in the end, gain us anything. This is because the majority of people will lie, cheat, steal, manipulate in any way they can, in order to gain in life, so those who do...more
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