James Joyce, born in 1882, attended University College Dublin, before travelling through Europe in his early twenties. His work includes the semi-autobiographical A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916), the landmark work of modernist fiction Ulysses (1922) and its successor Finnegans Wake (1939). He died in 1941 in Zurich.
In Joyce's eyes, Dublin is the whole world
*J.G. BALLARD*
With just one collection of stories, Joyce left his mark on almost
every short-story writer who followed him
* * Guardian * *
At the root of Joyce's artistry is a radical uncertainty which
allows multiple meanings and implications to live . . . but none to
dominate except the idea of the many mysteries at the core of
things
*COLM TÓIBÍN*
The vernacular specificity of [Joyce's] prose, his profound
understanding of the fallibilities of the human condition and his
joyous recountings of his city's undercarriage at work, ensure that
Dubliners retains a status that few have challenged and even fewer
attained
*EIMEAR McBRIDE*
Joyce made me want to write. His use of language was dazzling,
impressionistic but controlled, rhythmic, diverse, achingly
lyrical. He made people live on the page. He was serious,
hilarious, sensitively romantic, filthy and absolutely honest
*CAROL BIRCH*
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