Ian Watt began work on this book in 1955, and the intervening years have seen a boom in Conrad studies: but the thought that there might be nothing left for him to say quite rightly didn't enter his head. What's more, he has only just got under way: for all that it contains close on 200,000 words, this book is merely an antechapel to the main building. It considers the career of Conrad from Almayer's Folly to Lord Jim, and it does so at its own majestic pace. The section on Heart of Darkness is much longer than the novella itself, and those on The Nigger of the 'Narcissus' and Lord Jim are on a scale only a little less generous. No space could be found for extended treatment of the other early works, except Almayer's Folly. One can't help wondering how Watt expects to get the rest of Conrad - which includes what most people regard as his greatest work - into one volume, given that he proposes to proceed with the same deliberateness, to have his fully matured say on everything he regards as relevant, and to dismiss with due consideration all that isn't.
LRB 17 July 1980 | PDF Download
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