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Ulysses
Joyce, JamesWatts, Cedric

Issue #0

Ulysses

Dubliners, A portrait of the artist as a young man, Ulysses & Finnegans wake

Wordsworth Editions Ltd (Jan 15, 2010)
9781840226355
| Paperback
736 pages | 124 x 196 mm
Dewey 823.912

Subject

  • Fiction / Family Life
  • Fiction / General
  • Fiction / Literary
  • Fiction / Psychological

Plot

With a new Introduction by Cedric Watts, Research Professor of English, University of Sussex. James Joyce's astonishing masterpiece, Ulysses, tells of the diverse events which befall Leopold Bloom and Stephen Dedalus in Dublin on 16 June 1904, during which Bloom's voluptuous wife, Molly, commits adultery. Initially deemed obscene in England and the USA, this richly-allusive novel, revolutionary in its Modernistic experimentalism, was hailed as a work of genius by W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot and Ernest Hemingway. Scandalously frank, wittily erudite, mercurially eloquent, resourcefully comic and generously humane, Ulysses offers the reader a life-changing experience.