Monday, August 3, 2009

New Ulysses Links

Ulysses Seen: a beautiful graphic novel (or comic) version of the novel.

Wandering Rox: a social networking project I'm proud to be involved with, which involves the great work being tweeted page-by-page and then summarized by a group of volunteers.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

So This Is Dyoublong

My Joyce obsession has been reawakened, so I thought it time to reawaken this blog. A Finnegans Wake post is here, and here's some Ulysses info - there's a group with the goal of reading the novel before July 16th 2010. Join me at Joycecast, where I'll be reposting Ulysses as a new podcast. And eventually rereading Ulysses and Portrait. And maybe the Wake too if I live long enough for the copyright to expire!

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Book of a Lifetime: Ulysses by James Joyce

Chosen by Michael Horovitz
Friday, 23 May 2008

from independent.co.uk


Though much of it was written 90 years ago, Ulysses remains way ahead of our time. It planted evergreen paths for abandoning taboos on anything as fair game for literary treatment. For liberation of language, imagery, punctuation and sound effects; for stream of subconscious and shifting points of view; for dream realities and inner monologues; for the incorporation of every extreme of parody, play, epiphany, and uncensored speech or thought, in a wondrously ebullient wordhoard that celebrates the continuity of 3,000 years of literature.


Every dalliance in its pastures unfailingly tallies with, illumines and refreshes my experience of life. I love reconnecting with Leopold Bloom as he looks back and forward to his meals of the day; love joining Stephen Dedalus, Molly Bloom et al as they muse on their love, sex and fantasy lives. Scintillating syntheses of sound, sense and beauty suffuse these 742 pages. "Buck Mulligan slit a steaming scone in two and plastered butter over its smoking pith ... On his shoulders through the checkerwork of leaves the sun flung spangles, dancing coins." And yet acute social realism also deepens the mega-pithy topographical and psychological insights. As when Bloom, the newsprint-seasoned advertisement canvasser, peruses "The pink edition of the Telegraph... to read about Dignam, R.I.P.", whose funeral he had attended that day. Following the paper's account of the obsequies, names of the mourners are listed, among whom Bloom's earnest gaze lights upon – third from last – "L. Boom".

The book's sheer bulk might seem forbidding, as might the fanfaring reams of academic baggage that have spread around it from Joyce's personal odyssey to contemporary Dublin's hype-roaring Tiger Gluttonomy. There are indeed aeons of intertextual, linguistic and mythical references to be winkled out of its every cranny. And yet each cranny can be relished, if you read it aloud – or in the mind's ear – as delicious guileless word jazz. In a TV film about Joyce, a chorus line of schoolgirls, presumably uncluttered by a surfeit of esoterica, let alone of Joyceolatry, performed a delighted skipping-rhyme rendition of the following passage, cancanning as they chanted: "Sinbad the Sailor and Tinbad the Tailor and Jinbad the Jailer and Whinbad the Whaler..."

There's poetry for you. Wherefore, rejoice to reJoyce. Dylan Thomas did, Bob Dylan does, Plurabelle's to be. Green book-bound yet boundless – as erst and forever, amen. And woemen. In the beginsong was the bird. In the unend is "and drew him down to 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." An inexhaustible foun- tain of revelatory sound.




Joyce, reading from Finnegan's Wake

Sunday, November 18, 2007

A sample from my reading of Ulysses

More Links

Bloom: The Movie
CliffsNotes
More Joyce Music
Photo Tour of Dublin

Monday, October 15, 2007

My reading of Ulysses is now complete...

You can sample my narration with the flash player at my blog, download individual files at Liberty Lit, or subscribe to the Ulysses feed.


Here's Marilyn Monroe reading Ulysses (or at least pretending to do so):





This page has images of Irish currency before the Euro, upon which were the faces of Joyce, Parnell and Daniel O'Connell. This page features more Joycean sounds, including an interview with Senator David Norris, the most vocal champion of Joyce when I was growing up in Ireland. Here's a handbill advertising the show at which Joyce sang on the same stage as john McCormack:

Friday, October 5, 2007

if you go to Dublin...

A free MP3 tour "in the steps of Ulysses" can be found here.

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iremonger
Iremonger moved from Ireland to West Virginia in 2000, narrated the first complete free solo recording of James Joyce's Ulysses in 2007.
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