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Ulysses by James Joyce Buddy Read
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Sulking will be mandatory.

'Just read it like a novel. You don't have to read it as this great literary, philosophical work. It is a story like any other.'
That really helped get us all past the intimidation.
Here...it is just another retelling - this time of the Odyssey. It is a journey with adventures. It is also going to be witty, funny and probably a touch lewd and naughty. You should read Joyce's letters to his wife!
And thank you for keeping me company on this.

'Just read it like a novel. You don't have to read it as this great l..."
Thanks Theresa! I'm very glad that you set this up. Being able to discuss as we go will be so helpful and I'm looking forward to the journey in both senses.

There are handwritten notes too -- my, was my handwriting far nicer and smaller than now! Not a lot but one in particular caught my eye: I wrote my name and the date I purchased and started the book - 1/75. Because it was for a class, we all read the same edition so yes, one had to put one's name in the book.

Will you follow a tentative reading schedule or just read as you manage?


Ah, yes! It would have! So maybe you need to plan a couple long drives when you get home!

One more comment: One of Joyce's innovations is his mixing up of style and format...including stream of consciousness - which was not invented by Joyce, but by the great influencer Gertrude Stein years earlier. I have read a few books in my time that wander through different rhythms and formats and styles as you go. One that all here may have read is The Penelopiad by Margaret Atwood. And of course it is another Odyssey inspired retelling. Was Atwood paying homage to Joyce's Ulysses by incorporating different styles etc? Interesting question.


I will still try this summer but probably starting in July which completely misses the Bloomsday. I will be in NYC in early August so maybe I can make that my new goal to finish in time to go to the exhibit at the Morgan.


I totally could not move into this earlier no matter the good intentions.
But absolutely you are on for August, Jen K! I think the exhibit opens this weekend. Time to reopen my membership at the Morgan. May be special events we can join in on.

Good luck finishing by Bloomsday. Will be interested to see how you progress!


Interested to hear how you find the audio. I would consider that one as well.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Penelopiad (other topics)The Penelopiad (other topics)
Ulysses (other topics)
I am reading this paperback edition
If you join me, or have read it in the past, all progress, discussion, and general conversation about it appreciated.
Ulysses was initially serialized over 2 years in an American journal, with its first publication in book form by Sylvia Beach of Shakespeare & Co., the famous English bookstore, in Paris on February 2, 1922, James Joyce's 40th birthday. To honor its 100th, Shakespeare & Co. is making available for free until June 16th, 2022 a podcast of an ensemble reading of the entire work. Here is a link: https://shakespeareandcompany.com/. Those who like audiobooks might find this the perfect way to listen.
For those of us in or near NYC, The Morgan Library and Museum has a special exhibition: https://www.themorgan.org/exhibitions.... It opens June 3 and there are bound to be some special events tied to the exhibition itself. Might even offer a Bloomsday themed tea in the cafe. I will be checking out the exhibit and any events or teas.
Also in NYC, a theatrical performance of Ulysses is being given at a performance venue called Symphony Space: https://www.symphonyspace.org/events/...
Worth checking out your local bookstores and libraries and even small theater companies to see if any special Bloomsday events planned for this June 16th.