Dubliners

Paperback

English language

Published Aug. 6, 1992 by Minerva.

ISBN:
978-0-7493-9828-6
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OCLC Number:
877657808

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4 stars (1 review)

Published in 1914, Dubliners is James Joyce's first major work. Its original printers destroyed it on the grounds that it was libellous, indecent and blasphemous. Now it stands as the masterpiece that virtually invented modern narrative prose: a collection of incidents in the lives of ordinary men and women, made extraordinary by the eye of Joyce's genius. --back cover

182 editions

Much more interesting than I expected

4 stars

If you've been avoiding Joyce because of Ulysses, this book feels like a warm-up both for the reader and the author. There are beautiful phrases buried inside intriguing vignettes. Yes, the political and social commentary is there (and opaque for those of us without knowledge of the time period and history), but the stories are enjoyable independent of those allusions. (Except for Two Gallants. I felt like that one went right over my head, but I also noted the excessive walking similar to Ulysses.) I found a lot of pain in these stories, but I was also struck by the deep sense of community and family. Most of these "stories" don't have an ending as we think of story structure, but are open to interpretation and thought. Reminded me a bit of all those lessons in high school about the Lady and the Tiger by Stockton.

Subjects

  • Short stories
  • English fiction