A friend gave this to me in Ireland when I was living on a green card there, jobless, in debt, and in poverty. It’s really a touching collection of stories about people who have lived in Dublin.
Yep and it’s refreshingly accessible compared to his later books.
I haven’t read anything else written by this author. I’ve heard stories about how Ulysses was banned for some gross sexual description. I’ll stick to Dubliners!
I read through all of Joyce’s books when I was at University. It’s been a few decades now. I remember really enjoying most of his writing, but the details have faded. I think it’s about time to start a re-read.
It’s a good one. I’ve been thinking of re-reading it soon, too. Let me know your favorite story from it when you do!
Dublin James Joycers
I have not. Do you enjoy it? Would you recommend it? Also, I’ve got issues with the cover design. But that’s a conversation for another sub/day I’m sure.
Yeah, I’d recommend it! It is basically a collection of excerpts/memoirs from people who lived in Dublin, during various times periods. There’s a particularly funny one where a woman is supposed to get on a ship with her fiancé. They were supposed to leave Ireland, together, to go to Argentina. One the last page of it, the man looks back at the shore, as the ships drifts away, and realizes the woman stayed on the deck. I’m genuinely curious as to why you hate the cover. If you’d like to share, I’d love to hear it.
Ok I’ll check it out!
Honestly, just kind of disjointed between the word being interrupted by being split between 3 lines and then further interrupted by the placement of the name. Reads as DUB. LIN. james. ERS. Almost like Dublin and then an acronym “ERS”. Personal preference though and as someone who hasn’t read it maybe the disjointedness was intentional and reflective.z
Awesome! Let me know what you think of it.
I totally understand what you mean. It kind of works though when you consider how disjointed all the stories are since they’re all from lives of different individuals, during different time periods. It is a little strange upon first sight of it, though.
Aha I wondered!
Hell yes.
Two Gallants, dude. Two Gallants.
If you liked this, I’d also suggest Prague Tales by Jan Neruda. Similar concept, but, you know, “Prague”. ;)