Rating: Summary: Good introduction to Joyce Review: Allow me to preface, I'd actually give this four and a half, only because it's not Joyce's finest work.
If you enjoy a good story, that's engaging and will require some imagination about a time and place almost a century ago, then check this out. Joyce is one of the most hyped authors of all time, dare I say, and he delivers with this collection of short stories, which varies, and describes the human condition in a way that despite its settings of times past, is stil surprisingly contemporary.
If you have an interest in Joyce, check this out. If you're adventurous, start with Ulyses, then this one. I hope if you have an interest in this author, that you check it out and enjoy that which Dubliners has to offer.
Rating: Summary: Dublin as the center of the world Review: Despite being written almost a hundred years ago, James Joyce's `Dubliners' is still as fresh as when it was released. The characters are Dubliners, but above all they are human beings and act as such, and this makes this collection of fifteen stories so universal. Moreover this book is a good start for readers who want to read Joyce and are afraid of his most famous and notoriously difficult works such as "Ulysses" and "Finnegans Wake".The tales are supposed to be read in the order they are published because they follow the natural course of the human life. The first ones deal with childhood, then with adolescence, later adulthood --and in this segment some of them deal with public life-- and the last one is called "The Dead", making it clear that the stories follow the sequence of life events that happen to everyone. Joyce's brother Stanislaus Joyce once wrote that the book pairs up stories on common themes: adolescent life, sporting life, artistic life, amorous life, political life, religious life, and celibate life (male and female), plus four 'petty employees' (two married and two unmarried), plus the final story on 'holiday life'. But this kind of classification is only a plus when one reads the book, because what really matters is Joyce's ability to create real people and situation. Not only does the writer makes a wonderful job when developing his characters in such a small form of telling a story, but he also has a sophisticated command of the language. And some academics claim that "The Dead" is one of the best --if not THE best-- piece of short fiction written in the 20 century. The view of the human nature in this book is quite dark most of the time, dealing mostly with the failure or the impossibility of acquisition something desired, Joyce is able to sneak in the human soul and its incapability of coping with loss, fear and another difficult feelings. Most of the stories in "Dubliners" are not easy to be read, but all of them are a real pleasure to be discovered. An important book that with some concentration is accessible to everyone.
Rating: Summary: Dubliners Review: Dubliners is Joyce's first paean to his native city, a quiet, gentle look at the peoples and places that make up the identify of Ireland. Through 15 short - some very short - stories, we are introduced to a wide variety of people, from sad schoolboys to priests to dried up old aunts to merry young women to carousing drunks, as they go about their lives.
The stories are presented more as brief snapshots of a man or woman's life, than as a complete story with a beginning, middle and end. Throughout, there is very little conflict, no bangs, no explosions, and no horrific or unexpected twists. Rather, we see a boy obsessively in love with a girl, or a man sad that a love he rejected years earlier has died, or a woman plotting with some friends to bring her husband back to the Catholic Church. Because of these mild plots, we are able to delve deep into each character, exploring what it means to be an Irish person at the starts of the twentieth century.
While not obviously connected, most of the stories have minor similarities in characters or references. Very often, a throwaway line concerning a previous or upcoming story will make its way on to the page, which serves to create a cohesive whole from the disconnected stories. And of course, the city of Dublin joins them all together into a great song.
The writing style is not typical Joyce. There are mild patches of density here and there, but for the most part everything is straight forward. Ulysses this is not. But instead of tackling the scope of that enormous work, Dubliners is more concerned with chronicling the daily activities of ordinary people. A Catholic background would make certain sections of the novel more enjoyable, but is by no means necessary.
What Joyce has done here is to create a certain mood for a city. While grim - or more accurately, poor - there is an undercurrent of joy, perhaps not for the events taking place, but for the people in the stories. We are presented with reality, unflinching, unapologetic reality. And it is beautiful.
Rating: Summary: Great craft, but not so enjoyable to read Review: Had to read this for a class. Although Joyce is the master, and using this book as a text for study was helpful in my fiction writing, I have never been a big fan of Joyce from a enjoyment standpoint. To me, it's like watching Citizen Kane for a film class. A masterpiece, but I probably wouldn't want to read it again.
Rating: Summary: snapshots of life in Dublin Review: I have to admit that I didn't read all the stories(I did it for school as a HS junior, they didn't require reading all of them) and it's not the most exciting book. However, Joyce's stories are like snapshots of everyday life and I'm fascinated by that. He gives us vivid images of how unattractive Dublin is and tours into the minds the characters. Some stories are boring and hard to read but Joyce is good enough as a storyteller to give us pictures of life in Dublin that stick in your head.
Rating: Summary: The Most Important Collection of Modern Short Stories... Review: James Joyce defined the modern conception of what a literary short story is; how they should be character-driven pieces which end in an epiphany. How important then is The Dubliners, which features every short story Joyce ever wrote. The prototypical epiphantic story is "Araby," yet the best story in the collection is "The Dead," which is really a novella.
As good and important as these short stories are, I wouldn't recommend the novice reading them cold. Without an idea of who Joyce was, it will just seem that nothing happens in these stories. Of course, one must realize that `nothing happening' is what these stories are about; how the Irish had become a paralyzed, enslaved society.
Yet, on a more important level, I would recommend getting a reading guide simply for the cultural references that the modern person shouldn't be expected to get. There is a great deal of slang in The Dubliners. The entire point of the story "Clay" will be lost unless one knows what clay signifies in the Irish Halloween ritual. "Ivy Day in the Committee Room," is almost indecipherable unless one knows the names of the figures of early twentieth-century Irish politics. I actually used the Cliffs Notes for these and I found them very useful.
Rating: Summary: A Master Storyteller Review: James Joyce's Dubliners is one of the best collection of short stories ever penned. The characters are memorable, the plots are subtle, gripping and frequently ironic, the atmosphere of "dear dirty Dublin" rings true, and the writing is eloquent and disciplined. While his novels (e.g. Ulysses) get more attention, Dubliners may be his best work. Highly recommended.
Rating: Summary: A Master Storyteller Review: James Joyce's Dubliners is one of the best collection of short stories ever penned. The characters are memorable, the plots are subtle, gripping and frequently ironic, the atmosphere of "dear dirty Dublin" rings true, and the writing is eloquent and disciplined. While his novels (e.g. Ulysses) get more attention, Dubliners may be his best work. Highly recommended.
Rating: Summary: A perfect record of humanity Review: Joyce's "Dubliners" is a collection of fifteen short stories that present snapshots of the lives of common people in Dublin around the beginning of the 20th Century. The stories are subtle commentaries about Irish attitudes towards nationalism, religion, morality, life, and death. Each explores a distinctive, dramatic theme, such as sexual perversion ("An Encounter"), infatuation ("Araby"), the frustration of personal unfulfillment ("A Little Cloud" and "Counterparts"), self-imposed loneliness ("A Painful Case"), hubris ("A Mother"), and Catholic/Protestant conflict ("Grace"). Overtones of Irish nationalism, remembrance, and piety permeate all the stories. The stories are neither depressing nor uplifting, but rather open-ended in their denouement; no conflicts are resolved and no moral conclusions are reached. Joyce depicts the characters and scenes so sympathetically that the reader understands clearly why the dejected boy in "Araby" leaves the bazaar feeling like "a creature driven and derided by vanity" and the events that drive Farrington to beat his young son at the end of "Counterparts." And why, in "The Dead," Gabriel, after giving a dinner speech in which he makes respectful reference to the dead, feels his dignity knocked down a notch when his wife reveals to him the tragic fate of her past love. After nearly a century, "Dubliners" remains one of the best crystallizations of humanity bestowed upon the world.
Rating: Summary: Great for Narratology studies, but otherwise mediocre Review: Like many, I had to read this book as part of the requirements for my freshman course on narrative fiction in college. I was not impressed. Sure, for analysis on character portrayal techniques and center of consciousness theory, Dubliners is a useful and convenient tool; but as an example of brilliant writing, it falls very short. The fact of the matter is that some stories are better than others and to judge the book as a single work is a grievous mistake. It's surprizing there has not been a formal study of the many flaws in this book.
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