In high school we were given Dubliners in freshman year, and Portrait of the Artist as seniors. I read Ulysses in college, not as part of a class, when I had lots of extra brain power to expend on it. Don’t think I could do that now.
SO glad I(‘ve (finally) found others who were not impressed with Ulysses. . . I remember from a college course that many “classics” were long because authors were paid by the word back in the 1800s. . .also, wasn’t Ulysses the book that introduced the use of stream of consciousness as a plot device?
I can’t. I’m on my second copy of the book. Never made it past the first 100 pages. And I’m a rather well-read individual; I’ve read both the Iliad and the Odyssey (the Odyssey several times) but I still just can’t “get” Ulysses. Maybe if I spent a year in Dublin…
At least once a decade, since I was in my teens, I have reread Joyce, dutifully tackling Finnegan’s Wake and Ulysses as well as his other works. I can’t say I’m any more enlightened at 76 than I was a 16 but with age and experience, have come new understandings and appreciations, every time I read him.
I do the same thing with the complete works of Shakespeare.
Granddaughter was saying that she had a book assignment for school that was so boring she put it down after 10 minutes. The she said that it was Heart of Darkness. Finally, something we have in common.
I have started that book probably a half dozen times – usually when I was really sick and stuck in bed. Never, never made it through. So far I’ve been fortunate in the era of COVID, but I have a copy just in case …
“… and the sea the sea crimson sometimes like fire and the glorious sunsets and the fig trees in the Alameda gardens yes and all the queer little streets and pink and blue and yellow houses and the rose gardens and the jessamine and geraniums and cactuses and Gibraltar as a girl where I was a Flower of the mountain yes when I put the rose in my hair like the Andalusian girls used or shall I wear a red yes and how he kissed me under the Moorish wall and I thought well as well him as another and then I asked him with my eyes to ask again yes and then he asked me would I yes to say yes my mountain flower and first I put my arms around him yes and drew him down Jo me so he could feel my breasts all perfume yes and his heart was going like mad and yes I said yes I will Yes.” – from Molly’s Bloom’s Soliloquy
An Irish performer on A Prairie Home Companion told of Joyce’s portrait appearing on the Irish 10-pund note. “He always wanted to be a singer. Now he’s a tenner.”
If you do Twitter, the account to follow is https://twitter.com/UlyssesReader?s=20 . The bot posts a tweet from Ulysses every 10 minutes, working sequentially thru the book. Currently on the closing chapter (Molly Bloom’s soliloquy).
BE THIS GUY almost 4 years ago
I like to tell people I went to Harvard.
It was for a weekend.
Renatus Profuturus Frigeridus Premium Member almost 4 years ago
James Joyce is so James Joyce that I can’t read his novels. Same for Marcel Proust.
Templo S.U.D. almost 4 years ago
now just imagine Rat reading Cervantes’ Don Quixote or Tolstoy’s War and Peace.
B UTTONS almost 4 years ago
After taking 2 hours to read the last page, Rat still felt the Clifnotes was too long, and 2 hours was too much time to watch the movie.
DennisinSeattle almost 4 years ago
In high school we were given Dubliners in freshman year, and Portrait of the Artist as seniors. I read Ulysses in college, not as part of a class, when I had lots of extra brain power to expend on it. Don’t think I could do that now.
Finnegans Wake is impenetrable to me.
Ratkin Premium Member almost 4 years ago
This is the second time he read it. He rejoyced.
momofalex7 almost 4 years ago
If the ending is no good, why waste time reading the whole book?
ronaldspence almost 4 years ago
It’s like when people ask if I have read all of the books in my library…yes I have read all of them, maybe not all, of them, but all of them…
BasilBruce almost 4 years ago
“I finally got around to reading the dictionary . . . turns out the zebra did it.” —Steven Wright
alaskajohn1 almost 4 years ago
Isn’t Ulysses a Greek myth?
Bilan almost 4 years ago
I knew a 12 year-old girl that actually read Le Morte D’Arthur. (and if you’re not familiar with it, it rivals War & Peace in length)
baddawg1989 almost 4 years ago
Rat reminded me of Tales of Brave Ulysses by Cream. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J2CCfxiQ5QY
The Old Wolf almost 4 years ago
I’ve tried this with Finnegan’s Wake about a dozen times, but I keep ending up at Page 1.
AndreasMartin almost 4 years ago
Well, Ulysses finished me.Ah, glory school days…
franki_g almost 4 years ago
Might be easier to apply a clear gloss to the cover, that would finish the book
or
stick it in the wood chipper.
iggyman almost 4 years ago
“Cliff Notes”
Gent almost 4 years ago
Oh the Joyce of reading books.
gopher gofer almost 4 years ago
now, why didn’t i think of that…?
Sanspareil almost 4 years ago
Went to all the colleges of Oxford!Really!
Was born in Oxford, me and me mates would sneak in whenever we could!
Lots of times chased out of course! Remember being chased over the Bridge of Sighs with me mate Anthony by college officials!Ah the good old days!
A# 466 almost 4 years ago
Yes, you can. Yes. YES.
TheWildSow almost 4 years ago
Maybe Rat would like a nice pair of bookends for his birthday?
wrd2255 almost 4 years ago
Ulysses, the butt of many cartoonists’ jokes. A good acid-rock synopsis of it is Grace Slick’s song Rejoyce.
tripwire45 almost 4 years ago
Never read Ulysses, but I did read Moby Dick cover to cover. Never again.
Zebrastripes almost 4 years ago
Slacker Rat…..
Ellis97 almost 4 years ago
That’s why people buy audiobooks.
1953Baby almost 4 years ago
SO glad I(‘ve (finally) found others who were not impressed with Ulysses. . . I remember from a college course that many “classics” were long because authors were paid by the word back in the 1800s. . .also, wasn’t Ulysses the book that introduced the use of stream of consciousness as a plot device?
Iseau almost 4 years ago
Reading Ulysses is Usleses!
YippiKiAyMofo almost 4 years ago
I can’t. I’m on my second copy of the book. Never made it past the first 100 pages. And I’m a rather well-read individual; I’ve read both the Iliad and the Odyssey (the Odyssey several times) but I still just can’t “get” Ulysses. Maybe if I spent a year in Dublin…
diskus Premium Member almost 4 years ago
The cliff notes to Moby Dick has more pages than most novels
Ignatz Premium Member almost 4 years ago
The last page of Ulysses is the part you actually want to read. Yes.
Jim2g almost 4 years ago
I went to Rutgers, 3 years ,pipefitter lol
Ozark12 almost 4 years ago
Jim2g- and probably made more money than some of the grads!
Otis Rufus Driftwood almost 4 years ago
No, you didn’t Eat. (Deleted scene: Goat rolling his eyes.)
Linguist almost 4 years ago
At least once a decade, since I was in my teens, I have reread Joyce, dutifully tackling Finnegan’s Wake and Ulysses as well as his other works. I can’t say I’m any more enlightened at 76 than I was a 16 but with age and experience, have come new understandings and appreciations, every time I read him.
I do the same thing with the complete works of Shakespeare.
TSRaman almost 4 years ago
I read the first page and the last page.
ramcharanr almost 4 years ago
That’s nice. Now do Finnegans Wake.
gigagrouch almost 4 years ago
Honestly now, has anyone here, or has anyone you know ever read Ulysses past page 2?
MarthaGwen Premium Member almost 4 years ago
I’ve never finished Wuthering Heights…tried three times but gave up. I barely got through Jane Eyre.
Bookworm almost 4 years ago
“I can say I’ve finished Ulysses.” Mr. Rat, as my father told me many years ago, “Saying it don’t make it so.”
RACerri32 almost 4 years ago
I spent some time at Penn State ( 1 day driving seminar for too many tickets in my youth )
RACerri32 almost 4 years ago
Great morning chuckle , Mr. P
the lost wizard almost 4 years ago
Granddaughter was saying that she had a book assignment for school that was so boring she put it down after 10 minutes. The she said that it was Heart of Darkness. Finally, something we have in common.
Thinkingblade almost 4 years ago
I have started that book probably a half dozen times – usually when I was really sick and stuck in bed. Never, never made it through. So far I’ve been fortunate in the era of COVID, but I have a copy just in case …
Themanofoor54 almost 4 years ago
I like to tell people I was rich.
It was a gift card, which expired.
ImDaRealAni almost 4 years ago
Has anyone here read Finnegan’s Wake?
johnkuhnlein Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Utterly unreadable except for Molly’s section.
Mostly Water Premium Member almost 4 years ago
The last few pages are the best part of the book.
“… and the sea the sea crimson sometimes like fire and the glorious sunsets and the fig trees in the Alameda gardens yes and all the queer little streets and pink and blue and yellow houses and the rose gardens and the jessamine and geraniums and cactuses and Gibraltar as a girl where I was a Flower of the mountain yes when I put the rose in my hair like the Andalusian girls used or shall I wear a red yes and how he kissed me under the Moorish wall and I thought well as well him as another and then I asked him with my eyes to ask again yes and then he asked me would I yes to say yes my mountain flower and first I put my arms around him yes and drew him down Jo me so he could feel my breasts all perfume yes and his heart was going like mad and yes I said yes I will Yes.” – from Molly’s Bloom’s Soliloquy
Mostly Water Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Here is the entire soliloquy. https://archive.org/details/MollyBloomMonologEnd/page/n3/mode/2up
gcarlson almost 4 years ago
“And the head coach wants no sissies,
So he reads to us from something called Ulysses.”
- Alan Sherman, “Hello Mudduh, Hello Fadduh”
gcarlson almost 4 years ago
An Irish performer on A Prairie Home Companion told of Joyce’s portrait appearing on the Irish 10-pund note. “He always wanted to be a singer. Now he’s a tenner.”
AZPhinFan almost 4 years ago
“and the head coach wants no sissies, so he reads to us from something called ’Ulysses”…..“Camp Granada” song by Allan Sherman
WilliamDoerfler almost 4 years ago
Ulysses is a pile of pig dung.
Grover St. Clair almost 4 years ago
There is a local race called the James Joyce Ramble. My brother asked if it has a finish line or if it just goes on and on and on…
PuppyPapa almost 4 years ago
That’s about as much as you’ll get out of it anyway.
Sisyphos almost 4 years ago
Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man was easy; Ulysses was a slough but do-able, but Finnigan’s Wake has repeatedly beaten me back….
WCraft Premium Member almost 4 years ago
I’m still waiting for the movie…
clayface9 Premium Member almost 4 years ago
I got about fifty pages into it and gave up. I couldn’t understand it.
Imagine almost 4 years ago
Or you can miss someone else’s life.
Dana Kuhar Premium Member almost 4 years ago
yes
Dana Kuhar Premium Member almost 4 years ago
If you do Twitter, the account to follow is https://twitter.com/UlyssesReader?s=20 . The bot posts a tweet from Ulysses every 10 minutes, working sequentially thru the book. Currently on the closing chapter (Molly Bloom’s soliloquy).
The Waffles are my friends almost 4 years ago
James Joyce looks awesome with his eyepatch.
PBS1! over 3 years ago
I find it surprising Rat would read any of Ulysses.
PBS1! over 3 years ago
I’m flashing back to an earlier strip where Rat runs for president and a debate moderator asks if he is pro-choice and he hears “pro-Joyce”.
a nerdy trans girl over 3 years ago
i once wrote a book. it was two pages long.
{Read bio} rat the overthrow over 1 year ago
i went to cal, stanford, mit, harvard, depaul, u of o and ten more collages as a 12 year old. WOW! im smart!