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- Published on: 1656
- Binding: Hardcover
Customer Reviews
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.A great way to get into an almost impenetrable book.
By Del Buck
For anyone who has been fascinated by Finnegans Wake but has been unable to follow it very far in a printed version, this is a great alternative. I got a much better idea of what was going on and found it very enjoyable. The language flows like music. Of course I'm not Irish nor a Joyce expert and no doubt some will quibble about the interpretation, for example the inflections of speech which impart meaning to the stream of consciousness text - I myself doubt if there any 'right answers' to be found. However, if you're looking for a way into this book, this reading is probably as good as you're going to get.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful.Bursting with Life
By Mr. D. James
Joyce, James. UlyssesFifty years ago as an undergraduate I read Joyce’s novel and vowed that one day I’d read it again. Well, that day has arrived and gone and I’m proud to say I was not wrong in my original baffled reception of the book - or should I say The Great Book? First, it’s still not an easy read, but then who wants an easy read? For those who love language and literature it is surely the one crucial text that must be read through attentively over a period of time, say, as in my case, one month. Another crucial text for me is the English translation of Proust’s massive novel, correctly named, as in the Kilmartin translation, In Search of Lost Time. But that was in another country ... a word I originally mis-spelt, giving rise to a Freudian slip, under the spell perhaps of Joyce!It would be difficult to give a plot summary of the book, but it is basically the story about a son, Stephen Dedalus, looking for a father (although he, rather than the reader, doesn’t know it) and a father Leoplold Bloom looking for a son, likewise unconsciously. The two men wander through the meticulously detailed streets of Dublin in 24 hours, the ‘real’ time of the book. So this, rather than the frequently detailed critical apparatus suggested as a guide by academics, is the thread around which all the other ventures and adventures the men encounter is the essential thread around which the book is woven. If you like to trace the relationship between Ulysees and Homer’s Odyssey, good luck to you. Me, I preferred to read Joyce, his definitive voice, or rather voices, overwhelming all others, especially its swarm of critics and commentators.Ulysses is a multi-dimensional novel. Critics and readers in general talk of its ‘stream of consciousness technique,’ as if Joyce was the inventor or this method of narration. This is certainly not the case. The inner voice, including the subject’s irrelevancies and distorted syntax, has been part of the novelist’s armory for centuries, long before Joyce appeared on the scene. In fact poetry, humorous soliloquies and dramatic scenes are sprinkled regularly throughout the book. Take this section for example from the Night-town sequence in the book, in which all the characters in the book make an appearance, including Stephen’s dead mother:STEPHEN: Struggle for life is the law of existence but modern philirenists, notably the Tsar and the king of England, have invented arbitration. (He taps his brow) But in here it is I must kill the priest and the king.PRIVATE CARR: (Pulls himself free and comes forward) What’s that you’re saying about my king?(Edward the Seventh appears in an archway. He wears a white jersey on which an image of the Sacred Heart is stitched, with the insignia of Garter and Thistle, Golden Fleece, Elephant of Denmark, Skinner’s and Probyn’s horse, Lincoln’s Inn bencher and honourable company of Massachusetts.)To sum up, this is a book to read with care and relish. Every page is bursting with life.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful.Four Stars
By shanesully
Fantastic work(obviously) but so-so edition. Decent price, I like the cover art.
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