Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad

Joseph Conrad (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Conrad) introduces us to Charles Marlow, an ambitious and adventurous sailor who is employed by an English trading company and sent to an African colony. There he travels up the Congo, visiting the trading stations which barter for ivory with the natives. On his journey he is told about a man named Kurtz whose station is the

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Herzog by Saul Bellow

This masterpiece of introspection was published by Bellow (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saul_Bellow) in 1964. The reader is given epistolary revelations in unsent letters from Moses E. Herzog whose life is a failure and whose wife has left him, but who remains defiant and wryly perceptive about the world around him. 368 pages in Penguin Modern Classics edition. ISBN 978-0141184876

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Swann’s Way by Marcel Proust

Originally published as ‘A La Recherche du Temps Perdu‘ in 1913. In this opening volume of Proust’s (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcel_Proust) masterpiece, the narrator seems at first to be launching a fairly traditional life-story. But after the prelude the narrator travels backwards rather than forwards in time, in order to tell the story of a love affair that

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Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte

Charlotte Bronte (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlotte_Bront%C3%AB) gives us plain young governess Jane Eyre who is not long out the orphanage. Plain, perhaps, but spirited, moral, and fiercely independent of mind. How will she succeed in a world in which the odds are so heavily stacked against her? Employed at the remote Thornfield Hall, Jane has to unravel the secrets of her moody master

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