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  2. The story is set in London in 1886 and deals with Mr. Adolf Verloc and his work as a spy for an unnamed country (presumably Russia). The Secret Agent is one of Conrad's later political novels in which he moved away from his former tales of seafaring.

    • Joseph Conrad
    • 442
    • 1907
    • September 1907
  3. It was published in 1907. The novel describes events in the life of a man named Verloc, a secret government agent for an unnamed country living in London in 1886, who is ordered to carry out a bombing with the goal of manipulating the British government.

  4. The Secret Agent was Joseph Conrad’s delayed response to the real-life 1894 Greenwich Mystery — the accidental death of 26-year-old Martial Bourdin, who was fatally injured while carrying a bomb across Greenwich Park. Conrad had in fact forgotten all about this once notorious incident, until his friend, the author Ford Madox Ford, brought ...

  5. The Secret Agent Summary. Mr. Adolf Verloc, a shopkeeper in his forties, heads out into the London streets one morning, leaving his business in the hands of his wife, Winnie, and Winnie’s brother Stevie. Winnie looks after Stevie, who is mentally disabled, as if he’s her son. She married Verloc seven years ago because he had the money and ...

  6. Mar 14, 2019 · Set in London in the closing years of the 19th century, Joseph Conrad’s The Secret Agent (1907) takes Soho as both its central location and motif. A tale of espionage, intrigue and revolution, the novel examines themes of political extremism and social corruption that still resonate to this day.

    • Amy Wakeham
  7. A novel set in London, England, in 1886; published in London in 1907. SYNOPSIS. A terrorist acting under orders from the Russian Embassy hatches a plot to blow up London’s Greenwich Observatory. Events in History at the Time of the Novel. The Novel in Focus. For More Information.

  8. The Secret Agent is an early predecessor of the spy thriller genre that boomed in popularity throughout the 20th and 21st centuries. Other early espionage novels include Rudyard Kipling’s Kim (1901) and Conrad’s own Under Western Eyes (1911). Ian Fleming’s James Bond series, about a British Secret Intelligence officer, are perhaps the ...

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