Where to start with Joyce
Kai Frederik Lorentzen
lorentzen at hotmail.de
Sun Jun 24 07:16:24 CDT 2012
That's exactly how it worked for me: First Portrait, then Ulysses, then
Dubliners.
(I haven't finished Finnegans Wake yet but read there now and then.)
On 24.06.2012 07:43, Billy Genocide wrote:
> I'd say to start with Portrait because it indicates some of Joyce's
> genius prose work more than Dubliners, but isn't as 'daunting' as
> Ulysses. Dubliners certainly has parts that are worthwhile, but I
> think from a modern non-Irish perspective it can be a bit dull. Then
> again, if you're already enthused about Joyce and can read the likes
> of Pynchon, just read Ulysses. It is, as a few people have more than
> implied, a goddam work of unrivaled brilliance. But if your friend is
> prepared for Ulysses, Portrait's the best start in my opinion...
>
> On Sat, Jun 23, 2012 at 4:07 PM, Jude Bloom <jude at bloomradio.com
> <mailto:jude at bloomradio.com>> wrote:
>
> Thanks for responses. I've read Joyce up to Finegan, I think
> Martin Amis said Finegan turns out to be a 900-page crossword clue
> whose answer is, "the." Still want to brave it some time.
>
> I'm asking for a friend who wanted a recommendation... Is there no
> argument that you would start with Portrait cause it's the artist
> as a kid, then as an adolescent in Dubliners, & finally a young
> adult in Ulysses?
>
>
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