Heart of Darkness
My rating:
didn't like it it was ok liked it really liked it it was amazing
add to my books
read book

Heart of Darkness

3.33 of 5 stars 3.33  ·  rating details  ·  73,864 ratings  ·  3,194 reviews
Heart of Darkness, a novel by Joseph Conrad, was originally a three-part series in Blackwood's Magazine in 1899. It is a story within a story, following a character named Charlie Marlow, who recounts his advanture to a group of men onboard an anchored ship. The story told is of his early life as a ferry boat captain. Although his job was to transport ivory downriver, Charl...more
Paperback, 101 pages
Published November 7th 2006 by Filiquarian Publishing, LLC. (first published 1899)
more details... edit details
There is a good chance some of your friends read this book. Sign in to see!
sign in »

Friend Reviews

To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper LeeThe Catcher in the Rye by J.D. SalingerThe Great Gatsby by F. Scott FitzgeraldHarry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J.K. RowlingHarry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone by J.K. Rowling
The Most Frequently Challenged Books
31st out of 256 books — 75 voters
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper LeeThe Great Gatsby by F. Scott FitzgeraldThe Catcher in the Rye by J.D. SalingerWuthering Heights by Emily Brontë1984 by George Orwell
AP Literature
21st out of 80 books — 88 voters


More lists with this book...

Community Reviews

(showing 1-30 of 97,728)
filter  |  sort: default (?)  |  rating details
mp
It was a breathtaking read. There are few books which make such a powerful impression as 'Heart of darkness' does. Written more than a century ago, the book and its undying theme hold just as much significance even today. Intense and compelling, it looks into the darkest recesses of human nature. Conrad takes the reader through a horrific tale in a very gripping voice.

I couldn't say enough about Conrad's mastery of prose. Not a single word is out of place. Among several things, I lik...more
Sonanova
Sonanova rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: someone who enjoys a good tenth level of hell
Proving yet again that doing a concept first will get you immortalized, while doing it WELL will make you an unknown and forgotten writer at best, I also learned that in Conrad's time, people could drone on and on with metaphors and it wasn't considered cliched, but "art." I blame this book and others like it for some of the most painful literature created by students and professional writers alike.

It was like raking my fingernails across a chalkboard while breathing in a ...more
Hayes
Hayes marked it as celebrity-death-match  ·  review of another edition
REVIEW FOR CELEBRITY DEATH MATCH ONLY

The Essential Calvin and Hobbes (8) versus Heart of Darkness (25)

*cue music*



C: Hobbes... where are we?
H: Africa.
C: Why?
H: Before all that smoke came out of the tape recorder the guy said that we had to knock out some guy called Kurtz and then find and save Marlow. Did you bring your little red wagon?
C: Ask a stupid question....
H: Shhhh... there's Kurtz!
C: OK... I’ll jump out...more
Paul


CELEBRITY DEATH MATCH review for Round 2

**

“Anything approaching the change that came over his features I have never seen before, and hope never to see again. It was as though a veil had been rent. I saw on that furry visage the expression of somber pride, of ruthless power, of craven terror — of an intense and hopeless despair. He cried in a whisper at some image, at some vision—he cried out twice, a cry that was no more than a breath—

“‘The honey!...more
Richard
Richard rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: Everyone: required reading.
First of all, get this straight: Heart of Darkness is one of those classics that you have to have read to consider yourself a well-educated adult. That's the bad news; the good news is that this is a very easy book to read -- tremendously shorter than Moby Dick, for instance. And the prose is easy to swallow, so you don't really have an excuse. And having watched Apocalypse Now doesn't count -- if anything, it ups the ante, since that means you have to think about the similarities and difference...more
Sarah Fisher
Never in all my life has 100 little pages made me contemplate suicide...violent suicide. i had to finish it. i had no choice (yay college!). every page was literally painful.

am i supposed to feel sorry for him? because i don't. i feel sorry for all of Africa getting invaded with dumbasses like this guy. oh and in case you didn't get it...the "heart of darkness" is like this super deep megametaphor of all metaphors. and in case it wasn't clear enough, conrad will spen...more
Jenny
This guy's message is so subtle: Africans are depraved/we are all depraved/since I don't care about black people I'm going to let them serve as a metaphor for the depravity of human existence/I like writing sentences that yawn with the utter boredom of pretension, pomp, and waste/I have no heart/that's why I had to put the word heart in the title, etc, etc, etc.

Where's the negative one million stars option, again?
Taka
It's OK--

This is the first time I read Conrad after hearing how much of a prose stylist he is and comparisons to Nabokov (something he himself denied with a characteristic quip, "I differ from Conradically"). He is most definitely a prose stylist of the first rank. But in this heavily symbolic book, he is not much of a storyteller. Nothing really happens in the first half. Granted, the observations Charles Marlow makes throughout are fascinating and I was floored by some of...more
George Bradford
When I was a child, my father caught me frowning at a very small gift wrapped package I'd received. The dashed hopes for a larger package were broadcast across my face.

"Dynamite comes in small packages." My father counseled me. The literal and figurative truth of this statement has revealed itself throughout my life.

This story is specifically relevant to Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness. It is a small book. (Surprisingly small.) And it is pure dynamite. ...more
Michalyn
This is a book I read twice and will probably never read again. I try to see this as a "great" novel but I have always wished Conrad had achieved a greater separation between his own voice and Marlow's. For me his inability to do so made it difficult to stomach the inherent racism in the book. The passage that will always stick out in my mind is the one in which the narrator muses that an educated black man is as "unnatural" as a dog putting on clothes and walking on its hind...more
Angela
Angela rated it 5 of 5 stars
Recommends it for: everyone
Recommended to Angela by: it's in the canon
This book knocked me off my feet with its weird and evil feel. It is told in an observational style that is perfect. Prior to reading Heart of Darkness, I don't think I'd ever come to terms with the murky depths humanity can sink to. It's sort of about the way a situation can corrupt a person, or an entire group. And it's so true.
Marvin
Written for the Celebrity Death Match Review Tournament

I, Marlow, was recently commissioned by Christopher Robin to go into the Hundred Acre Wood to investigate the stoppage of honey exports from the area. It has been rumored that Pooh Bear has become seclusive and was possibly hoarding the honey.

I set out on the Storybook River in a rickety steamer. The trip was dangerous and arduous. At one point, we were attacked by a tribe of Oompa Oopmas who threw chocolate at us. I...more
Briynne
I listened to this book in my car during my daily commute to balance out the fact that I was reading "Outlander" at home. Just to keep my literary karma on an even keel and to prevent the inevitable cognitive dissonance which would occur if I was only reading romantic fluff.

I was surprised by how much I thought this book would be better if I had read it in print, considering that it is meant to be a story the main character is telling aloud to the other people with him. ...more
Jess
This book was grueling the first several times I read it. It somehow turned up on the syllabus for at least 3 classes that I took, starting in high school and extending throughout college. Like a sucker, I kept re-reading it every time.

It turns out it was worth it. Normally, I'm the type of person who will force myself to finish a book that I don't really like, but will never bother picking it up again. But more than circumstance caused me to keep going at this one. There's something...more
Naeem
In the Western Canon, the best book I have read on colonialism. Despite what Chinua Achebe says about its racism, this is a towering achievement -- perhaps the apex of the Western canon. (It is pretty much downhill from Conrad onwards, I would say. Although Orwell's Burmese Days gets there somewhat implicitly.) It shows that it is possible to be a Westerner and have a very deep and accurate understanding of colonialism. Conrad lays bare the barbarity of modernity, especially the necessary r...more
Jen
The first time I read this book I was in 12th grade. I hated it at the time and since then I have read numerous reviews of its greatness. I decided to try again.

While the psychological components of the book are riveting, the overt racism that much of it is based on is hard to swallow.

Marlow speeks much of the darkness and in some ways I think he implies that Kurtz's insanity was caused by the knowledge that the natives were naturally subordinate or subservant to him be...more
Dave
I'm sure there are many redeeming qualities and philosophies to be absorbed from this book. However, it really is the absolutely most boring read I have ever attempted to undertake. I should probably give it another chance before condemning it to 2 stars...but, this book seriously made my mind drift away to unrelated places and topics more frequently than any other book I can remember. I would almost rather read Shakespeare backwards on a rollercoaster than pick this one up again.
Izajane
I twice got an A on a paper written about how much this book sucks. The first time was in high school and the ever assigned Heart of Darkness and Apocalypse Now. Thank the cosmic gasses that the movie is actually good or Seniors would be committing heinous wet acts of self-subterfuge in droves. But I digress...
The second was in college when I had to read this poor excuse for a novel again to compose a little Conrad/Faulkner homily. What an insult to Faulkner.
John
John rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: readers who want to know the world in its noisy entirety
Recommended to John by: a teacher
Morally questionable & structurally shaky, a tragic shaggy-dog story, HEART OF DARKNESS nevertheless is one of those books I just can't get beyond. Every three or four years I find myself swooning again at the redolence of its goopy roux: part exoticism, part outrage, part high drama, & no small part prophecy. Conrad never brought off a "well-made novel," though THE SECRET AGENT comes close -- while anticipating the terrorist neuroses of the century that followed (the book appeared ...more
Daniel
Joseph Conrad's "Heart of Darkness" was one of my favorite books when I was a teenager, and I'm happy to report that after another reading a couple decades later -- at least my third time through the book -- nothing has changed. In fact, as the years wear on, parts of it seem to gain new significance. One small example I feel I could reference on almost any given day, especially those days when I'm at work, though you'd have to have read the book to understand the context:
`Do you
...more
Leslie
I know as an English major I am supposed to find this work brilliant and important, but I just don't. I hate it. I hated it the first time I read it, the second time I read it, AND the third time I read it.
Angus
Disclaimer: This is not a review. This may have spoilers. Read at your own risk. Visit original post at Book Rhapsody.

***

Intro

There are some books that I enjoyed reading but for the heart of me could not really remember. I would claim to have read them but only the vaguest things about them run through me. Coincidentally, some of these books are from the same writer. More so, these books are short works that are either long short stories or short novels. And they sa...more
Laysee
The Heart of Darkness is a slim novel that belies the immense profundity it reveals about human nature. I re-read it after many years and understood again why it left me sober, tearful and broken when the last page was turned. Marlow, the seaman narrator, told the story of his journey into the heart of the African interior and his encounter with the natives and most notably, Kurtz, the ivory agent, a much revered white man. To me, the journey into the heart of darkness is the unraveling of what...more
K.D.
K.D. rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: Tata J
Recommended to K.D. by: 501 Must Read Books and 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die
Shelves: 1001-core, apartheid, race
This is my first time to have read a novel by Joseph Conrad and I am floored. This novel is famous for the last words uttered by the main antagonist, Mr. Krutz: "The horror! The horror!" and was made into a movie by Francis Ford Coppola and filmed partly in Pagsanjan Falls in 1979. The title of the movie was Apocalypse Now starring Marlon Brando as Krutz and Martin Sheen as Millard or Marlow in this novel. However, Coppola changed the setting from Africa to Vietnam among changes in the...more
Kevin
I recently read a popular author, I forget who, referring to Conrad as "the least seductive of the great writers." I think I'd have to agree, unless you force me to include Nathaniel Hawthorne or somebody as a great writer. A great work and hugely significant, one you'll be glad you read, and even find yourself talking about well after you've read it (if you didn't already before you read it - it's such a cultural touchstone it's hard to escape). Once you get into it, it is a really...more
Brandon
Brandon rated it 2 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: t'pau
Shelves: librivox
(i know! what's with all the librivox? what? can't i actually read? i can too!)

the best part about re-reading these classics is that it makes you want to watch the movie adaptation, and oh, the HORROR, heart of darkness, novella that it is, lacks the details i desperately need in a tale about human depravity in colonial africa. especially after reading moby dick, i am in no mood to fill in the flora/fauna/dragons that should play a more prominent role in a book with such a fantastic ti...more
Kelly
Kelly rated it 2 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: men, people into colonial studies
Meh. I'm sorry, but so much 'meh' on this book. I understand that the concept is fascinating, and I agree with that on some level. But I think the 'descent into darkness' story has been told much better by other people. The colonialist statement is fine, I suppose, but it's really not all that interesting. I don't think it's that well written.

A book about descent into darkness has to seduce you, make you yearn after these supposedly "evil" happenings, or people or whatever ...more
Bianca
It took finishing the book to like it, but I can safetly say I understand why Conrad is praised. I was forced to read it by sadists in high school, but the more I read the more I liked what was being said about the Western world in regard to those we deem inferior. The book isn't racist, as some people think, and if you finished the book and were left with the impression that the Africans were just dumped on for 100 pages then you missed the point. Conrad's narrator goes into Africa with preconc...more
Patrick
Patrick rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Patrick by: Jeremy Andriano
Shelves: 2008
I think this was a little over my head, apparently Conrad spoke like a half-dozen languages so maybe I lost something in the translation because I only speak one and 1/4. I got the main themes of imperialism, racism, the thin line between civilization and barbarism, but as for any specific thing that was happening in the book while I was reading, I'm really at a loss for. I did like "Apocalypse Now" though, for what it's worth.
Madeline
Confusing as hell. Just rent Apocalypse Now and pretend you read the book. Just remember to change a few details: 1) the setting is Africa, not Vietnam. 2) Kurtz is an ivory trader. He is not in the army. 3) Kurtz does not get killed; he gets sick and dies. 4) There are no puppies.
That's pretty much it.

Read for: 12th grade AP English
« previous 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 3257 3258
Heart of Darkness  (Paperback)
Heart of Darkness (Paperback)
Heart of Darkness (Paperback)
Heart of Darkness (Paperback)
Heart of Darkness (Paperback)

Readers Also Enjoyed

3345
Joseph Conrad (born Józef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski) was a Polish-born English novelist who today is most famous for Heart of Darkness, his fictionalized account of Colonial Africa.

Conrad left his native Poland in his middle teens to avoid conscription into the Russian Army. He joined the French Merchant Marine and briefly employed himself as a wartime gunrunner. He then began to work...more
More about Joseph Conrad...
Heart of Darkness/The Secret Sharer Lord Jim Heart of Darkness and Selected Short Fiction The Secret Agent Nostromo

Share This Book

Your website
Pin It
“We live as we dream--alone....” 382 people liked it
“The belief in a supernatural source of evil is not necessary; men alone are quite capable of every wickedness.” 158 people liked it
More quotes…

What should I read next?: The book ending support group
What should I read next?:...
248 members
last activity Feb 03, 2012 01:54pm
Stavanger Book Club
Stavanger Book Club
11 members
last activity 2 hours, 14 min ago
WJ Literary Society
WJ Literary Society
2 members
last activity Jan 27, 2012 07:10pm