I got interested in Conrad a few years ago. Heart of Darkness and Nostromo are both reviewed somewhere on this blog. Then I kind of ran out; I didn't come across any of his work in the library or the pre-loved bookshops I frequent locally or in London. I remembered Typhoon in connection with a novella/short story I'm currently working on and bought the Penguin Classics edition online and also pre-loved.
I'm glad I did. It gave me the background information I was looking for but Typhoon itself is a fantastic read. Of the three other stories in the collection (which, it should be noted, is the collection Conrad personally put together, insisting that the stories complimented one another), two are sea-based, two about seafarers ashore. The other sea-based story, 'Falk', is a 'reminiscence' in the same form as Heart of Darkness - a bunch of retired seamen chatting in a Thames-side pub. The twist, when it is revealed, is truly jaw-dropping. The other stories, 'Amy Foster' and 'To-Morrow', are traditional short stories, character studies rather than twisted tales. In both cases the main characters have mental shortcomings. Amy has what we would today call learning difficulties and cannot fully understand the good-looking immigrant the sea has deposited in her village. She remains enigmatic for us because Conrad uses the distancing device of the local doctor telling her story to his friend. This works extremely well. In 'To-Morrow' a retired seaman is convinced the son he drove out of his house and who has been seeking for years will turn up 'to-morrow'. It has become a mania with Captain Hagberd, so much so that when son Harry does turn up he refuses to believe it is him. This edition also includes Conrad's dramatisation of 'To-Morrow' (which he had to call One Day More because there was a play called Tomorrow already on tour). This is interesting as an example of turn-of-the-century art theatre of the sort that attracted Yeats and Shaw, Masefield and Somerset Maugham, but adds little to the story.
The introduction by Paul Kirschner did not capture my attention. I'm not sure anyone needs the notes, the glossary could, I daresay, be more useful.

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