Titles in this set includes:
1) Victory
2) The Secret Agent
3) Nostromo
4) Lord Jim
5) Heart of Darkness Description:
1) Victory
Axel Heyst, a dreamer and a restless drifter,
believes he can avoid suffering by cutting himself off from others. Then he
becomes involved in the operation of a coal company on a remote island in the
Malay Archipelago, and when it fails he turns his back on humanity once more.
But his life alters when he rescues a young English girl, Lena, from
Zangiacomo's Ladies' Orchestra and the evil innkeeper Schomberg, taking her to
his island retreat. The affair between Heyst and Lena begins with her release,
but the relationship shifts as Lena struggles to save Heyst from detachment and
isolation.
2) The Secret Agent
In the only novel Conrad set in London, The Secret Agent
communicates a profoundly ironic view of human affairs. The story is woven
around an attack on the Greenwich Observatory in 1894 masterminded by Verloc, a
Russian spy working for the police, and ostensibly a member of an anarchist
group in Soho. His masters instruct him to discredit the anarchists in a
humiliating fashion, and when his evil plan goes horribly awry, Verloc must
deal with the repercussions of his actions.
3) Nostromo
Nostromo, published in 1904, is one of Conrad's finest
works. Nostromo -- though one hundred years old -- says as much about today's
Latin America as any of the finest recent accounts of that region's turbulent
political life. Insistently dramatic in its storytelling, spectacular in its
recreation of the subtropical landscape, this picture of an insurrectionary
society and the opportunities it provides for moral corruption gleams on every
page with its author's dry, undeceived, impeccable intelligence.
4) Lord Jim
This compact novel, completed in 1900, as with so many of
the great novels of the time, is at its baseline a book of the sea. An English
boy in a simple town has dreams bigger than the outdoors and embarks at an
early age into the sailor's life. The waters he travels reward him with the
ability to explore the human spirit, while Joseph Conrad launches the story
into both an exercise of his technical prowess and a delicately crafted picture
of a character who reaches the status of a literary hero.
5) Heart of Darkness
Generally regarded as the pre-eminent work of Conrad's
shorter fiction, Heart of Darkness is a chilling tale of horror which, as the
author intended, is capable of many interpretations. Set in the Congo during
the period of rapid colonial expansion in the 19th century, the story deals
with the highly disturbing effects of economic, social and political
exploitation of European and African societies and the cataclysmic behaviour
this induced in some individuals.