
In a bustling colonial newspaper office, a young editor and his colleague Geoffrey Renouard trade observations over coffee. Renouard has just returned from the remote plantation of Malata, a place he spent five years exploring after an invitation from the retired statesman Dunster. Their dialogue drifts between the faded grandeur of old political figures and the unsettling impressions that solitude has left on Renouard’s perception of faces and motives.
The conversation hints at a tangled web of personal ambition and lingering obligations tied to the coveted Malata concession. As Renouard grapples with the alienation of his isolated years, the editor’s pragmatic world‑view clashes with the lingering nostalgia of the city’s elite. Listeners are drawn into a portrait of colonial life where gossip, power, and the quiet desperation of a man returning home intertwine, setting the stage for deeper revelations to come.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (336K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
1997-09-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1857–1924
Born in what is now Ukraine and writing in his third language, he turned years at sea into novels and stories full of danger, moral strain, and unforgettable settings. His work includes Heart of Darkness, Lord Jim, and Nostromo, and it helped shape modern English fiction.
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