"I’m afraid I can"t read James Joyce": a common complaint,usually delivered with a satisfied smile. There is so much else to read, why bother with word games invented by a writer who boasted that the difficulty of his work would keep scholars busy for generations?
Yet Joyce is one of the greatest writers of the twentieth century--perhaps the greatest. There is no need to avoid him.Those who have found themselves unable to finish Ulysses or even to begin Finnegans Wake should try his first book,Dubliners. They will fred no plainer English.
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James Joyce is "the greatest literary rebel of our time,"wrote Sean O'Faolain. He rebelled against social and literary conventions, against Catholicism,and against Dublin, the city at the center of this magnificent early collection of stories.
In Dubliners, Joyce paints vivid portraits of the denizens of the city of his birth, from the young boy encountering death in the first story, "The Sisters," to the middle-aged Gabriel of the haunting final story,"The Dead." The collection is both an unflinchingly realistic portrait of "dear dirty Dublin" and,as Joyce himself explained, a chapter of the moral history of his country from which his countrymen could get "one good look at themselves." It is a remarkable look, by turns bawdy and witty, but always darkened by a paralysis of spirit and emotions.Each of these fifteen stories startles the reader into realizing universal truths in moments Joyce called epiphanies...
Introduction by Brenda Maddox
THE SISTERS
AN ENCOUNTER
ARABY
EVELINE
AFTER THE RACE
TWO GALLANTS
THE BOARDING HOUSE
A LITTLE CLOUD
COUNTERPARTS
CLAY
A PAINFUL CASE
IVY DAY IN THE COMMITTEE ROOM
A MOTHER
GRACE
THE DEAD