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Youth; Heart of Darkness; The End of the…
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Youth; Heart of Darkness; The End of the Tether (Classic, 20th-Century, Penguin) (edition 1995)

by Joseph Conrad (Author), John Lyon (Introduction)

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1,269915,152 (3.91)14
This is a collection of three novels written by Joseph Conrad. I enjoyed the third story the most. The End of the Tether has an interesting twist at the end of the story. The Heart of Darkness is interesting but I found it less meaningful. Youth was rather mediocre. ( )
  GlennBell | Aug 6, 2017 |
Showing 9 of 9
This is very interesting collection of three short stories all related to the certain parts of human life.

Youth

Title says it all - young Marlowe (also a lead character in Heart of Darkness) gets his first command as a result of disastrous event when coal transported by his ship catches fire and explodes. Whole story though just emanates the energy of the youth that sees nothing as an obstacle and is eager to prove itself. Conrad manages to capture the way of life on high seas, relations among the crew and everyday life of the seaman to the smallest detail.

Heart of Darkness

Marlowe, now older and wiser (middle age) decides to join the European company for tour in Africa, running a steamer carrying ivory from impenetrable jungle to the European companies collection station. This is rather wordy story and it takes a while to go through it. People Marlowe meets are all strange people who might be very proper back in civilization but in the wilderness they seem to have lost their compass. Driven by greed they tend to look at all around them (natives and other company men) as an obstacle. So when he finally meets mysterious Mr. Kurtz who placed himself as a ruler of several native tribes, great man of whom company has greatest expectations, he sees how far can man fall when not in control of his wits. Like most people at the time Kurtz came to Africa as a missionary to spread "light" among the natives. But in the process he slowly lost his way starting to treat his surroundings and natives as his own fiefdom, waging brutal wars and killing men, women and children sometimes out of whim. Soon his madness takes its toll and Kurtz slowly spirals into illness of body (mind being lost for a while now) and finally gets saved by Marlowe only to die at the very end of journey down the river.

I understand there is lots of controversy around this story but as far as I can see it Conrad very successfully presented two things.

First is utter horror and acts of colonial companies extracting natural wealth using natives as a workforce and treating them in horrible ways. The way greed controls the people in power (when is it ever enough?) eats through the core of very people working for the company. Even if they are not inherently bad under the influence and temptations of wealth (so much ivory) they become brutes and very much total opposite of what they think of themselves (remember this is period where developed world (Europe and Americas) treated all the exotic locals of Africa and Asia as dark places to which they need to bring the light).

Second is the very fact that in each of us we have a savage sitting. By savage I mean part of us that is ready to do heinous things, kill , maim, destroy. Civilization is maybe there to help us keep it under control but when in wild it is very clear how weak man is. When confronted with might and beauty of nature unprepared souls get overwhelmed and start their slow spiral into madness. For Kurtz, very capable orator, man capable of rallying other men for his cause, contact with natives, their very nature and fear he can exploit for his means, places him in the place of absolute power. More than enough to consume anyone. It is very short step from genius to madman but also from civilized to utmost barbaric.

The End of the Tether

Third story is very sad story of an ultimate sacrifice. What is devoted father (old age) ready to do for his child, his daughter. After losing his wife and losing his savings old captain decides to spend rest of his days making money to help his daughter that is in very bad financial state. Father will forgo his pride and opinions [especially about his son in law] because he knows hard times strike a man down from time to time and nobody can be blamed for it. He gathers strength to do his best to help his daughter. Even if it means working for a complete maniac of ship-owner and having a back-stabbing first officer.
Very touchy and ultimately very sad story with a happy ending.

All three stories impressed me much. They might be too wordy for modern times and pages might seem just so full of words that you have a feeling you will drown in them. But as a stories they are very humane and very down to earth and this is great part of their charm.

Recommended to all who like a good story. ( )
  Zare | Jan 23, 2024 |
This was a nice combination of stories. ( )
  CAFinNY | Apr 26, 2019 |
This is a collection of three novels written by Joseph Conrad. I enjoyed the third story the most. The End of the Tether has an interesting twist at the end of the story. The Heart of Darkness is interesting but I found it less meaningful. Youth was rather mediocre. ( )
  GlennBell | Aug 6, 2017 |
I bought this book for Heart of Darkness, and as this famous piece is so short (less than 70 pages), the publishers pads it with two other short stories - Youth, and The End of the Tether. Heart of Darkness is a compelling piece of writing. It is famous for portraying the atrocities of the colonial regime in the Congo (the darkness refers equally to the Belgians as to the dark continent)) but the surprise for me was the quality of the writing.
The story is told aloud by a story-teller, as in Lord Jim, which is a clunky way of structuring the writing, but Conrad makes it work. While an expose, it is not a polemic. The awful bits are told, almost as aside. No effort is made to comment. The reader is being told a different story - the Congo seems to be the background. But of course, the Belgian regime is really the core of the book, and the apparent structure just a device. It works so well.
The other stories are good to read, but not up to the standard of Heart of Darkness. Tether is over written, too embellished - the story drowns in words in a way that is a total contrast to Heart of Darkness.
Great stuff. Read May 2014. ( )
1 vote mbmackay | May 25, 2014 |
my recent reading of the poisonwood bible definitely enhanced my reading of this book (for context) because it talks about nearly the same situation - white colonization of the congo, and the ravaging of the land and people by the whites, as well as their lack of understanding of the native people. i had to keep in mind, while reading, that it was written in 1899 and it's not fair to judge a writer by today's standards for social justice. i recognize that it might be easier for me to say that as a white person, i can somehow justify the use of the n word in this book. but i also wonder at his purpose for his depiction of the native people, if he was drawing attention to the injustice or perpetuating it. it certainly seems that his intention is to show the destruction of the land and people. i'm just not sure if he does this from a place of true understanding of the congolese or not. he does say "The conquest of the earth, which mostly means the taking it away from those who have a different complexion or slightly flatter noses than ourselves, is not a pretty thing when you look into it too much." for me, though, the writing was a bit dense and hard to get through, with awkward sentence structure, but at the same time the language was fantastic. in retrospect i actually wish i'd read this book aloud. it's so short that it's possible to do this, and i think the language comes through better that way.

my favorite 2 quotes, one for content and one for language:

"'I don't like work - no man does - but I like what is in the work, - the chance to find yourself. Your own reality - for yourself, not for others - what no other man can ever know.'"

"'The sun was low; and leaning forward side by side, they seemed to be tugging painfully uphill their two ridiculous shadows of unequal length, that trailed behind them slowly over the tall grass without bending a single blade.'" ( )
  overlycriticalelisa | Apr 2, 2013 |
He comprado este libro porque Conrad es uno de los personajes de la novela de Vargas Llosa El sueño del celta y quería conocer la versión de Conrad, sobre la "aventura" colonial de los belgas en el Congo, tal como que se relata en El corazón de las tinieblas.

Después encuentro esta magnífica reseña sobre esta edición, que incluye también Juventud y En las últimas, de forma que se presenta tal como fue editado por Conrad en 1902. Les aconsejo que la lean:

http://www.ojosdepapel.com/Index.aspx?blog=337
  pepesaura | Apr 26, 2011 |
Well, I hate to do it, but I'm taking the rating down to 4 out of 5 stars. I'm not sure why, but this time around, Joseph Conrad did not manage to induce the same level of fascination as he did the first couple of times I read this book. Maybe because the last time I read it was for a class, where we got to discuss it so much.

It's the story of Marlow, the classic man of the sea, and his trip down the river Congo to find Kurtz, the company man said to have native. But instead of being drawn into the story, this time I felt like Conrad was deliberately keeping the reader at arms' length. Marlow is telling the story, and an unnamed male listener is telling the reader what Marlow says. Then Marlow tells the listener who tells us what Marlow says somebody else says. Still with me?

Maybe the point of all those layers was to make the reader question the story a little more, to ask one's self how much you really know about someone else if all you know is what they say.

Anyway, it was good to read it again, but not as great as I remembered. I'm not sure why, but it must be a change inside me, because I *LOVED* this book back in college. ( )
1 vote cmbohn | Aug 2, 2009 |
Youth, a Narrative; and Two Other Stories is a collection of three novellas by Joseph Conrad published as a single volume in 1902, it is one of the half-dozen or so volumes of short-story/novellas published in his lifetime. The stories are Youth (1902), The Heart of Darkness (1899) and The End of the Tether (1902). Although Heart of Darkness is more well known today - it has aged well - the story Youth got title billing - Conrad worked on it between 1881 and 1998, about 17 years! It certainly was his favorite of the three based on his comments in the Authors Note, in part because it was the first appearance of "Marlow", an auto-biographical alter-ego character that would resurface in many later works. Youth is the most autobiographical, with Conrad saying (quote) "Youth" is a feat of memory. It is a record of experience; but that experience, in its facts, in its inwardness and in its outward colouring, begins and ends in myself. (end-quote)

Heart of Darkness is a more stylistic work, much to the chagrin of many readers expecting a gripping adventure story along the lines of Apocalypse Now, it is a slow, stuttering, dark, beast of a thing that even after 3 readings I still feel like I am reading it anew, an impenetrable thicket of overlapping symbolisms. Conrad says of its authenticity (quote) "Heart of Darkness" is experience, too; but it is experience pushed a little (and only very little) beyond the actual facts of the case. [Heart of Darkness] was like another art altogether. That sombre theme had to be given a sinister resonance, a tonality of its own, a continued vibration that, I hoped, would hang in the air and dwell on the ear after the last note had been struck.(end quote) I wonder what the "actual facts of the case" were - or is it best not to know.

The last story is the longest of the three, it is clearly Conrad's least favorite, saying (quote) As to its "reality," that is for the readers to determine. More skill would have made them more real and the whole composition more interesting. It is not very likely that I shall ever read "The End of the Tether" again. No more need be said. It accords best with my feelings to part from Captain Whalley in affectionate silence.(end quote) It is a damning sentiment, even by under-stated Victorian standards, however contrary to Conrad I found it to be absolutely delightful. He dispenses with the heavy symbolic artifice of the first two works and sticks with a more naturalistic or realist mode that conveys a sense of place and time, and in particular the character of Captain Whalley, is unforgettable. The villein, Mr. Massey, owner of a tramp steamer in the backwaters of the orient, is on par with evil captains like Queeg or Ahab - it was easy to imagine him being played by Humphrey Bogart. I love works rich in historical detail and this one really brings the era alive.

--Review by Stephen Balbach, via CoolReading (c) 2008 cc-by-nd ( )
1 vote Stbalbach | Mar 18, 2008 |
I decided to read this as preparation (along with Cary's Mister Johnson - next) for reading 'Things Fall Apart' by Chinua Achebe. It's been on the shelf for years and I thought I had read it before, as a child on a visit to Sri Lanka, but perhaps not.

Although it's a short book, it took me an age to read, to begin with because I was relishing the language, the descriptions and Marlow's sardonic oratory style. After a while, perhaps I am tired, my mind kept drifting away from the text, snatched up by the few moments of action. I loved Kurtz' last words 'The horror!', which Marlow was unable to tell Kurtz' Intended (and how when he lied to her the world didn't stop turning). I was chilled by the treatment of the natives in their chain-gangs, as well as by the range of mad, greedy, salivating characters scattered along the journey (particularly the Russian and the chap in charge of bricks). The hungry cannibals' restraint was one of many mysteries, and the man looking after the state of the 'road' which seemed to mean shooting negros fo rno apparent reason (pp19-20) was one of many horrors. Probably my own ignorance of the apparent aim of Marlow's appointment spoilt, for me, the contrast of what he found, so I didn't get as much out of the book as I might. Perhaps the Cary and the Achebe will help. ( )
  emmakendon | Jul 5, 2007 |
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