Joyce, what do you think?

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fausTVR

Original Poster:

1,442 posts

151 months

Saturday 3rd August 2013
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I have read Ulysses 3 times over the years and although a difficult and sometimes indecipherable tome I've actually enjoyed it. However, I've tried and failed to get far with Finnegan's wake or A Portrait of the Artist.

It's a bit like self flagellation, wading through this kind of dense and difficult material, I suppose I see it as self improving but is it just a waste of effort? In my case it may be like casting pearls before swine.

hidetheelephants

24,463 posts

194 months

Saturday 3rd August 2013
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I've been having a similar thing with Somerset Maugham's 'Of Human Bondage'; I've picked it up, read a bit, then put it down and left it for a month or more several times as the central character is basically a with not many redeeming features. It's an interesting book(I'm perhaps 2/3 through it) but the aforementioned flaws make it painful to read at times.

RDR 838

94 posts

137 months

Wednesday 28th August 2013
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I've read Ulysses once but found it a bit of a chore.

Mobile Chicane

20,843 posts

213 months

Wednesday 28th August 2013
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Self-serving, self-congratulatory toss.

I've often heard it said that you need to be 'taught' Ulysses, something which I personally take umbrage with.

I think that if the writer can't make a direct connection with the reader, without the need for an intermediary to explain their genius, then they've failed at their job.

Plenty of other writers have explored the 'stream of consciousness' concept without resorting to wk: John Dos Passos' 'USA', for example.