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The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (Penguin Popular Classics)
The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (Penguin Popular Classics)

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Author: Joseph Conrad
Publisher: Penguin Classics
Category: Book

List Price: £2.00
Buy Used: £0.01
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 12 reviews
Sales Rank: 25772

Media: Paperback
Edition: New edition
Pages: 256
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 6.9 x 4.4 x 0.8

ISBN: 0140620567
EAN: 9780140620566
ASIN: 0140620567

Publication Date: September 27, 2007
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: **SHIPPED FROM UK** We believe you will be completely satisfied with our quick and reliable service. All orders are dispatched as swiftly as possible! Buy with confidence!

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Joseph Conrad)
  • Audio Cassette - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (Twentieth Century Classics)
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (English Library)
  • Audio Cassette - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (Penguin Twentieth Century Classics)
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (Penguin Modern Classics)
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (World's Classics)
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (Oxford World's Classics)
  • Paperback - Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (Pan classics)
  • Paperback - Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (Modern Library)
  • Paperback - SECRET AGENT
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent
  • Paperback - Conrad Joseph : Secret Agent (Signet Classics)
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (Signet Classics)
  • Unknown Binding - Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (Everyman Paperbacks)
  • Paperback - Conrad: The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (Everyman)
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent (Dover Thrift Editions)
  • Mass Market Paperback - The Secret Agent: And, Almayer's Folly (A Bantam Classic)
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent (Penguin Joint Venture Readers)
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent (Penguin Longman Penguin Readers)
  • School & Library Binding - Secret Agent: A Simple Tale
  • Hardcover - The Secret Agent (Everyman's Library Classics & Contemporary Classics)
  • Unbound - The Secret Agent
  • Audio Cassette - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale: Complete & Unabridged
  • Audio Cassette - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale: Complete & Unabridged
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent
  • Hardcover - The Secret Agent
  • Hardcover - Secret Agent
  • Paperback - Secret Agent
  • Library Binding - The Secret Agent
  • Hardcover - The Secret Agent, the
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent, the
  • Hardcover - The Secret Agent
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent
  • Hardcover - The Secret Agent
  • Hardcover - The Secret Agent
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent
  • Hardcover - Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (Transaction Large Print Books)
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (Wordsworth Classics)
  • Hardcover - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (Everyman's Library classics)
  • Audio Cassette - Secret Agent: A Simple Tale
  • Hardcover - The Secret Agent (Konemann Classics)
  • Audio Cassette - The Secret Agent
  • Paperback - The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale (Modern Classics)

Similar Items:

  • Heart of Darkness
  • Dubliners
  • Lord Jim: A Tale (Penguin Popular Classics)
  • To the Lighthouse (Wordsworth Classics)
  • Nostromo (Wordsworth Classics)

Customer Reviews:   Read 7 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars A favourite classic   June 23, 2008
For some years, this intriguing novel has been a favourite of mine. Conrad leads the reader through a cunning series of plots and subplots, all the while creating an atmosphere of discontent and darkness. The distinct characteristics of Mr Verloc will interest and bemuse the reader for many hours along the main plot of this novel. Anarchy has never been so readily depicted in classic literature.


2 out of 5 stars Precisely too many words   May 7, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I read another review that describes Conrad's prose as dense, difficult and gorgeous. I'm not sure about the last adjective. This is Conrad at his most dense and difficult. Almost impenetrable, one might say. For the opposite end of his scale see the earlier Lord Jim or the later Shadow Line. They are light and breezy by comparison.

I read this book about two years ago and can hardly remember a thing about it. It has a memorable bomb scene in Greenwich Park. I can't even remember where the rest of it is set. Somewhere in the West End, maybe?

Conrad is an author I often hate to love, but find myself loving nonetheless. One thing I do like about him is that the sunny, tropical locations lighten the density and difficulty of the surface prose. It's like a dirty window looking onto a sunny day. But that's not right. There is somehting precise, almost surgical, about Conrad's prose that is far from 'dirty'. The Secret Agent, set in an almost Dickensian, misty, murky C19 London, doesn't have the appeal of these tropically-set works, anyway.

I'll probably come back to The Secret Agent one day, as I probably will Nostomo, his other supremely dense, difficult book.



5 out of 5 stars Not all that simple   January 10, 2007
 8 out of 8 found this review helpful

Conrad's prose is dense, difficult and gorgeous. Before you pick up a book like this, you need to prepare yourself for an author who will happily write eight pages or so of prose between two lines in a conversation and not apologise (in fact there is, as is customary for Conrad, a self-justifying foreword). Patience will reward you with a surprising and darkly humorous tale of anarchists learning that real sources of chaos, anarchy and violence have little to do with abstract ideas.

It's not much like Heart of Darkness. Heart of Darkness is perhaps more important in the history of literature, but this is bigger, richer and more enjoyable. Read both.



4 out of 5 stars The human side of the underworld   October 30, 2005
 4 out of 5 found this review helpful

Conrad leads us into 19th Century London, allowing us an immersion into an underground world of anarchists and the strings pulling on them. The group of anarchists, though bound by a certain political directionality, is presented to us as unstructured, a loose association of very idiosyncratic individuals who on the whole seem more like the comical caricature of dejected rebels. And so, setting aside great political insights, Conrad zooms into the peculiar lives of these individuals that form the underworld. In particular, we witness the failed efforts of Mr. Verloc, the secret agent, to prokove the masses by planting a bomb. The emotional distance and strained relationship with other individuals including his wife is to have devastating consequences for him. The author has a fantastic ability to depict his characters, to describe in detail the exteriorisation of their intense psychological states, and thus to invoke powerful images of the scenes. One is a true witness to the events unfolding.


5 out of 5 stars A Passage to Blighty   May 16, 2001
 11 out of 11 found this review helpful

E.M. Forster apparently said something to the effect that Conrad's London in 'The Secret Agent' was too dark a place: a foreigners projection of European anxieties onto, in reality, a far more benevolent scene. It's true, Conrad's vision of England's capital is dark, but you'd have to say that it is no darker than, say, moments in Dickens', or even T.S. Eliot's 'Wasteland'. Developments in both the world of Crime Thrillers, and in the reality of terrorism and espionage suggest that Conrad was certainly onto something. Indeed, many now current cliches of the genre can be seen to originate from Conrad's book: mainly that the criminal and the policeman; the terrorist and the 'keeper of the peace' are not worlds apart. Few contemporary writers, however, are quite as keen and scrupulous as Conrad, who is never shy of taking us into the deepest and darkest places in the modern political psyche. Conrad's prose is as intensely atmospheric, as psychologically penetrating, and as layered with ironies as anything you will read in English. Sometimes it takes an 'outsider view' to tell you hard things about your beloved little Island. You won't get Merchant Ivory touching Conrad.



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