5.68k reviews for:

Heart of Darkness

Joseph Conrad

3.03 AVERAGE

challenging dark slow-paced

Noise cancelling headphones, ambient soundscapes, and reading aloud to myself in a barely audible whisper. I have slowed down in my endeavour to really know this novel and still grasp fruitlessly for some morsel of understanding other than a vague sense of dread; but a nightmarish anxiety is all I am seemingly able to extract from Heart of Darkness.
Sometimes a novel does not exist to be understood but to be viscerally felt. It is raw. It is chaotic. It is unflinching. Heart of Darkness is a glimpse of the deepest abysses of the human soul and forces you to reckon with your own potential for evil.
adventurous challenging dark slow-paced
adventurous dark mysterious medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: No
adventurous dark mysterious reflective sad tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

I don't understand why the community gives this masterpiece such a low rating. Did the bad adaptation of the movie Apocalypse Now lead us astray?  

Even though the book was written more than a century ago, the theme is still poignant today, and the character Captain Kurtz is striking and unforgettable. I was particularly moved by the ending when the narrator Marlow traveled back to England and lied to Kurtz's delusional fiancée that Kurtz's last word was her name instead of "The Horror! The Horror!" 

I'm familiar with the debates around this one and I do think it's a mistake to conflate Conrad's voice with Marlow's, though regardless the language and viewpoint of the novel is uncomfortably retrograde, even if superficially Conrad's eye is clearly critical of colonialism. Bracketing all that, for me a bigger problem was how much the novel insisted on telling, not showing, that Kurtz was a monster. It might be the point (Marlow's "staying true" to Kurtz), but you never get beyond Marlow's description of Kurtz - he's a kind of impenetrable barrier that precludes any actual connection to the character himself. Which would be a fine bit of modernist play, but it takes the sting out of the actual critique supposedly at the centre of the text. The writing is great and the sense of dread is so oppressive it's almost unbearable at times, but ultimately I struggled to connect with this one.
slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: No

Die Nelly, eine seetüchtige Jolle, schwoite an ihrem Anker ohne die leiseste Regung in den Segeln und hielt Rast...

- Das Herz der Finsternis, 00:01


🎧 gehört als Hörbuch


Now that was a snooze fest!
Nein, wirklich, ich bin mehrmals eingeschlafen. Dass ich dann zurückgespult und doppelt so lange für dieses Hörbuch gebraucht habe, hat sich nicht gelohnt...
Man dämmert so vor sich hin, bis man durch einen Satz wie diesen aufschreckt, sich denkt wtf und dann genügts auch schon wieder: 

... Wir hatten unterwegs einige dieser Kerle als Besatzung angemustert. Feine Burschen – Kannibalen – in ihrer Art. Es waren Männer, mit denen man arbeiten konnte, und ich denke mit Dankbarkeit an sie. Und schließlich fraßen sie einander ja nicht vor meinen Augen auf...

- Das Herz der Finsternis, 33%

Ich bin auf dieses Buch durch Trophäe auf dieses Buch aufmerksam wurde. Das hätte mir eigentlich schon eine Warnung sein sollen. 😃

Kurz gesagt: einer der Klassiker, mit denen ich einfach nichts anzufangen wusste. 
dark mysterious tense slow-paced

All I have to say is Achebe was right. 

3.5

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