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Joseph Conrad: A Personal Remembrance

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - Literary Studies series
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Determined not to write a biography about his friend Joseph Conrad (1857-1924) in the usual dry style, Ford Madox Ford (1873-1939) instead produced a novel.

As a result, some biographical facts are given less emphasis than others, in particular the acrimony which later blighted relations between the two men.

But the work is distinguished by its liveliness and by a wealth of vivid detail.

Ford describes Conrad's remarkably long-eared horse, his haphazard use of adverbs and their fraught collaboration over their second joint novel, Romance, during which Ford's carefully unexciting style provoked the adventure-loving Conrad to depression.

Ford's impressionistic portrayal of Conrad as an elegant, likeable swindler and 'beautiful genius' strikes a far richer chord than a purely historical account.

First published in 1924, just after Conrad's death, this work remains a striking example of creative non-fiction, instructive for scholars and students of English literature.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1139794892 / 9781139794893
Ebook
05/03/2014
English
264 pages