probably closer to a 3.5.
totally forgot that HEART OF DARKNESS is more of a short story than a full fledged novel. thankfully, the slimness helps Joseph Conrad move things along quickly enough because this guy, as he proves in five other short stories that come in this edition, loves to yap sometimes.
for HEART OF DARKNESS, Conrad creates an impeccable sense of place in the jungles of Africa; an unknown land filled with bizarre people, both native and foreign, and a foreboding sticky air. there's a gap Conrad explores in how his characters view the colonization efforts they become entrenched in: the storyteller is clearly shook by his adventures while other people he crosses paths with simply muck about. but one man, a Mr Kurtz, acts as some kind of last bastion for the reader - a well regarded man lost to a land of violence and greed. Conrad, and the storyteller, build up Kurtz to ultimately reveal he too has become consumed by the land, and now is spit out as a broken, violent, and bizarre interloper, one who rails against the colonizers he works for while ruling over the residents he has come across. Conrad views this man, this idol, as a tragedy and inevitably of man continuing on with imperialistic needs. it's a surprising depth that makes its final moments hit hard.
the remaining five stories of this edition include:
KARAIN - A MEMORY - a nostalgic moment that focuses on merchants remembering a local warlord they came across. Conrad here hits a nice pace and tone, creating a scenario that seeps with a lived in sort of voice while grappling with the memories of not only its tellers, but the charismatic man they come across.
THE IDIOTS - this one is a bit more rushed. what seems to start out as some sort of horror-ish soiree to a seaside town instead turns into a family saga. in portraying a young couple struggling to make ends meet, Conrad seems to relish in misery for this tale. it has its moments but feels a bit too loose.
AN OUTPOST OF PROGRESS - honestly probably my favorite of all the stories here. it builds off the setting and themes of HEART OF DARKNESS but adds a more obvious satirical bent, focusing on two goobers trying to keep their African outpost in check for a couple of months. cue scenes of them going mad while failing to do much of their chores. despite a more humorous tone, Conrad keeps an air of menace running underneath everything culminating in an explosion of madness.
THE RETURN - makes for a narrative big swing for Conrad, focusing on an English couple coming to terms with a relationship transgression. Conrad's writing here goes fully internal, from the spouses point of view, rattling off into long monlogues of his feeling over every minute action and reveal that comes his way. it's a smaller set story, and starts off interesting, with an interesting path to boot, but Conrad gets lost in his meandering paragraphs, bringing things to wrap with a thud.
THE LAGOON - another bittersweet memento of a story, this one about a man relaying his past as his love slowly dies away next to him. throughout all of these stories, Conrad constantly creates this world where memory and reality bleed into something that become a nightmare or dream or both. it's a very involving and unique sort of creation and in THE LAGOON, adventure, love and tragedy create a soft, hurt finale for a collection that has viewed pain (or unrest, if you will) from all angles.