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Books with title Lord Jim : A Tale

  • Lord Jim

    Joseph Conrad, Linda Dryden

    Mass Market Paperback (Signet Classics, July 1, 2000)
    With gorgeous new packaging, a new introduction, and an updated bibliography, this reissue celebrates the classic novel that set the style for a whole new class of literature: novels of an outcast from civilization finding refuge in the tropics. This is a story of dramatic action and psychological penetration, a work that critic Morton Danwen Zabel calls an example of Conrad's "central theme...the grip of circumstances that enforce self-discovery and its cognate, the discovery of reality of truth."
  • Lord Jim

    Joseph Conrad, Frederick Davidson

    (Blackstone Audio, Inc., June 1, 2010)
    This is a novel about a man's lifelong efforts to atone for an act of instinctive cowardice. Young Jim, chief mate of the Patna, dreams of being a hero. When the Patna threatens to sink and the cowardly officers decide to save their own skins and escape in the few lifeboats, Jim despises them. But at the last moment, dazed by horror and confusion, he joins them, deserting the 800 Muslim passengers to apparent death. Tormented by this act of cowardice and desertion, Jim flees to the West. Living among the natives in Patusan, a remote trading post in the jungle, he is able to cease sacrificing himself on the altar of conscience. When he defends Patusan against the evil ''Gentleman Brown,'' his efforts create order and well-being, thereby winning the respect and affection of the people for whom he becomes Tuan, or Lord Jim.
  • Lord Jim

    Joseph Conrad, William B. Jones Jr.

    (Gilberton Company Inc., Jan. 1, 1957)
    An original printing of a 1957 classic!
  • Lord Jim

    Joseph Conrad, Lynd Ward

    Hardcover (The Limited Editions Club, Jan. 1, 1959)
    Book by Conrad, Joseph
  • Lord Jim

    Joseph Conrad

    Paperback (Independently published, Jan. 21, 2018)
    A hundred years ago a seaman’s life was full of danger, but Jim, the first mate on board the Patna, is not afraid of danger. He is young, strong, confident of his bravery. He dreams of great adventures - and the chance to show the world what a hero he is. But the sea is no place for dreamers. When the chance comes, on a calm moonlit night in the Indian Ocean, Jim fails the test, and his world falls to pieces around him. He disappears into the jungles of south-east Asia, searching for a way to prove himself, once and for all…
  • Lord Jim

    Joseph Conrad, Steven Crossley

    (Recorded Books, Jan. 1, 1997)
    "This is a novel about a man's lifelong efforts to atone for an act of instinctive cowardice. Young Jim, chief mate of the Patna, dreams of being a hero. When the Patna threatens to sink and the cowardly officers decide to save their own skins and escape in the few lifeboats, Jim despises them. But at the last moment, dazed by horror and confusion, he joins them, deserting the 800 Muslim passengers to apparent death. Tormented by this act of cowardice and desertion, Jim flees to the West. Living among the natives in Patusan, a remote trading post in the jungle, he is able to cease sacrificing himself on the altar of conscience. When he defends Patusan against the evil ''Gentleman Brown,'' his efforts create order and well-being, thereby winning the respect and affection of the people for whom he becomes Tuan, or Lord Jim."
  • Lord Jim

    Joseph Conrad, John Lee

    (Tantor Audio, Feb. 22, 2010)
    Lord Jim tells the story of a young, idealistic Englishman-"as unflinching as a hero in a book"-who is disgraced by a single act of cowardice while serving as an officer on the Patna, a merchant-ship sailing from an eastern port. His life is ruined: an isolated scandal has assumed horrifying proportions. But then he is befriended by an older man named Marlow who helps to establish him in exotic Patusan, a remote Malay settlement where his courage is put to the test once more. Lord Jim is about courage and cowardice, self-knowledge and personal growth. It is one of the most profound and rewarding psychological novels in English. Set in the context of social change and colonial expansion in late Victorian England, it embodies in Jim the values and turmoil of a fading empire.
  • Lord Jim

    Joseph Conrad

    Mass Market Paperback (Signet Classics, Jan. 1, 1981)
    With this book Joseph Conrad set the style for a whole class of literature-the novel of the outcast from civilization finding refuge in the tropics. The natives of Patusan in the Far East worship the bold young Englishman by the name of "Lord Jim," but he despises himself. Tortured by an act of cowardice and desertion that wrecked his career in the Merchant Service years before and tormented by his ideal of what an officer should be, he has fled from scandal farther and farther East. It is only here in remote Patusan, filling a post given him by the trader Stein, that he at last finds the will to cease sacrificing himself on the altar of conscience. He becomes a part of life again by accepting the "destructive element within himself." And he follows his star to the end-marrying the beautiful half-caste, Jewel, and defending Patusan against the evil "Gentleman Brown."
  • Lord Jim.

    Joseph Conrad

    (Bantam Books, Jan. 1, 1963)
    None
  • Lord Jim

    Joseph Conrad, Frederick Davidson

    (Blackstone Audio, Inc., June 1, 1993)
    This is a novel about a man's lifelong efforts to atone for an act of instinctive cowardice. Young Jim, chief mate of the Patna, dreams of being a hero. When the Patna threatens to sink and the cowardly officers decide to save their own skins and escape in the few lifeboats, Jim despises them. But at the last moment, dazed by horror and confusion, he joins them, deserting the 800 Muslim passengers to apparent death. Tormented by this act of cowardice and desertion, Jim flees to the West. Living among the natives in Patusan, a remote trading post in the jungle, he is able to cease sacrificing himself on the altar of conscience. When he defends Patusan against the evil ''Gentleman Brown,'' his efforts create order and well-being, thereby winning the respect and affection of the people for whom he becomes Tuan, or Lord Jim.
  • Lord Jim

    Illustrated by Cover Art Conrad Joseph

    Unknown Binding (New York: Bantam, 1965, )
    None
  • Lord Jim

    Joseph Conrad

    (Guild Publishing, Jan. 1, 1978)
    None