Lord Jim
Joseph Conrad
Paperback
(Wiseblood Books, May 31, 2013)
LORD JIM (1900) is the story of a ship which collides with “a floating derelict” and will doubtlessly “go down at any moment” during a “silent black squall.” The ship, old and rust-eaten, is voyaging across the Indian Ocean to the Red Sea. Aboard are eight-hundred pilgrims. Terror possesses the captain and several of his officers, who jump, and thus wantonly abandon the sleeping passengers who are unaware of their peril. For the crew members safe in their life-boat, dishonor is better than death. In the words of the story’s narrator, Captain Marlow, LORD JIM portrays “those struggles of an individual trying to save from the fire his idea of what his moral identity should be. . . .” That individual is Jim, who serves as the chief mate of the Patna and who also “jumps.” Recurringly Jim envisions himself as “always an example of devotion to duty and as unflinching as a hero in a book.” But his heroic dream of “saving people from sinking ships . . . ” does not square with what he really represents: one who falls from grace, and whose “crime” is “a breach of faith with the community of mankind.” Jim’s is also the story of a man in search of some form of atonement once he recognizes that his . . . his dream of “the success of his imaginary achievements,” constitute a romantic illusion. This WISEBLOOD CLASSIC EDITION contains a powerful interpretive essay by Professor George Panichas. WISEBLOOD BOOKS is an Editing & Publishing Line dedicated to preserving, editing, and publishing fiction, essays, and other works fit for the world stage. We believe many manuscripts that should be published widely remain buried in desk drawers because they cannot meet the New York publishing industry's often dubious demands. We aim to remedy that. WISEBLOOD CLASSICS brings hard-to-find works back into being, and introduces forgotten writings of great merit to a new generation. Visit us at www.wisebloodbooks.com.