Some online resources for Ford Madox Ford: Wikipedia entry The Good Soldier at Project Gutenberg The Ford Madox Ford Society International Ford Madox Ford Studies, published by the Ford Madox Ford Society Agreg-ink’s site appears to have many useful links for online texts, bibliographies and other resources Julian Barnes’ essay for The Guardian: The Saddest […]
Month: 17 years ago
The text for Lord Jim can be found at Project Gutenberg. A free audio version can be downloaded from the LibriVox site. This post is the best spot for any comments on the book. Below are the links for resources and posts for the book: Online resources for Joseph Conrad Lord Jim discussion: Chapters 1 […]
The 1965 movie version of Lord Jim, directed by Richard Brooks and starring Peter O’Toole as Jim is a visually beautiful film to watch. Other notables in the cast include James Mason as Gentleman Brown, Eli Wallach as an oppressive general, Dahlia Lavi as the Patusan girl (Jim calls her Jewel in the book) and […]
The text for The Shadow-Line can be found at Project Gutenberg. Joseph Conrad’s The Shadow-Line is a reminiscence of the narrator obtaining his first command in addition to his first voyage as captain. The young sailor meets all kinds of challenges and crises, overcoming them mostly with help he doesn’t recognize, and advances over the […]
This section covers the Patusan episode of Jim’s life. Reaching Patusan safely, Jim is imprisoned by one of the rival leaders. He leaps twice to safety and renown (as compared to his one leap to dishonor from the Patna), once over the blockade and once over the narrow river between settlements. Jim devises and carries […]
This section covers from the outcome of the court inquiry through Jim reaching Patusan. The verdict was relatively mild, requiring the sailing certificates of the Patna crew cancelled (although you got the feeling it would have little impact for most of the crew). As Marlow put it, “The real significance of crime is in its […]
The text for Lord Jim can be found for free at Project Gutenberg. There are also audio versions there and at LibriVox. The breaks for discussion for Lord Jim are totally arbitrary but I hope they will be at natural points. Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim was written around the same time as Heart of Darkness, […]
Mark Twain’s King Leopold’s Soliloquy engages the atrocities in the Congo differently than Conrad—through satire. While the subject matter hardly seems like it would lend itself to such an approach, Twain does a good job at lampooning King Leopold II and issuing a call to end the hellish arrangement. The American Museum of Natural History […]