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The Secret Agent

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About this listen

The Secret Agent was one of the first espionage novels ever written, and it is certainly one of the finest in the oeuvre of Joseph Conrad. The story concerns the attempt by a group of back-alley revolutionaries to destroy one of London's most famous landmarks and thereby set off a revolution. As the plot unfolds, we discover a cast of unlikely villains, self-aggrandizing intellectuals, overeager bureaucrats, fame hungry politicians, and innocent bystanders, all described with poignant psychological depth as only Conrad could.

The story centers around Adolph Verloc, owner of a Soho bookshop and ostensibly a member of a group of home-grown anarchists, but actually in the pay of a foreign government. Verloc's quiescent wife, Winnie, maintains their stable household in which she tries to provide for her retarded brother and her aging mother under the thinly disguised irritability of her husband. The anarchist collective consists of "Doctor" Ossipan, who lives off his romantic attachments to women barely able to take care of themselves; "The Professor", an explosives expert who is so insecure that he is perpetually wired with a detonator in case he is threatened by police capture; and Michaelis, a corpulent writer composing an autobiography after a mitigated sentence in prison.

When Verloc is summoned to the embassy in whose pay he works, he receives a cold reception from his new superior, Vladimir. Vladimir tells Verloc that he's going to have to start producing or he'll lose the wages he receives. A humiliated Verloc is shocked when he receives orders to blow up Greenwich Observatory. As the scheme takes shape, it is Verloc who is compelled to execute the plan. But his doubts and fears are only too well justified, and despite his misgivings, he pushes ahead. However, it is the man-child Stevie who brings the enterprise to its ignominious end.

Public Domain (P)2007 Audio Connoisseur
Classics Espionage Genre Fiction International Mystery & Crime Literary Fiction Mystery Spies & Politics Thriller & Suspense Marriage Fiction England Crime
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Unfortunately the narration makes this offering almost unlistenable. The odd mispronounciation I can cope with, but the way that Charlton Griffin mangles Conrad's syntax and his inappropriate and disruptive "characterisation" has to be heard to be believed.

Ruined by the narrator

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Currently studying English at the University of Nottingham - this website in general has helped a lot. In the grand scheme of audiobook readings, it is a refreshing revelation to stumble across an individual with a decent narrative voice, together with a wide variety of entertaining, and at times amusing accents which might be employed whenever so demanded. Some may be irritated, but I'm sure they need to have a cup of tea and relax...

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