‘Brilliant’ book branded a ‘masterpiece’ and ‘greatest novel ever’ | Books | Entertainment

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More than a century after its first publication, James Joyce’s Ulysses continues to divide, dazzle, and dominate the literary world. Long hailed by critics and academics alike as a towering achievement of modernist literature, the novel was first published in 1922 and takes place within one single day, June 16, 1904. It follows the life of three ordinary Dublineers, but what unfolds within its 800 pages is anything but ordinary.

Through a dizzying array of literary techniques, shifting narrative styles, and deep psychological insight, Joyce transforms the mundane into the mythic, reimagining Homer’s Odyssey in a modern context. Ulysses explores the richness and complexity of everyday experience, revealing the countless ways a single day can be perceived and lived.

The novel follows three central characters: Stephen Dedalus, a young writer and intellectual; Leopold Bloom, a Jewish advertising agent; and Bloom’s wife, Molly, a professional singer.

Their lives intersect over 18 episodes that loosely parallel the adventures of Telemachus, Odysseus, and Penelope in The Odyssey, but Joyce turns the grand epic inward, focusing not on heroic deeds but on the thoughts, habits, and fleeting moments of ordinary life.

Dense, challenging, and stylistically experimental, Ulysses is difficult but immensely rewarding thanks to its richly layered narrative that explores identity, time, and consciousness.

Mitchell Hanegan wrote about the novel in a Google Review: « A literary masterpiece. Quite possibly the greatest novel ever written. The author’s command of the English language is remarkable and evident from the first page to the last.

« The book is written in a unique artistic style, it offers a brilliant panorama of all life, and for those stuffy old bats who can’t live without classical references, this book abounds with them.

« A stroke of genius. Although some parts can be rather vulgar, and other parts rediculously dense, (Hail, Sparknotes), the book is the most intricate and detailed portrait of every aspect of life I have ever read. »

Eliya Sara also called it « a work of unparalleled scope and literary brilliance. » Sara wrote: « Joyce manages to distill the most detailed thoughts, imagery and concepts down into the space of a few words, often through referencing obscure texts and philosophies, but also incorporating plenty of known psychology, philosophy and myth (Most commonly the Old Testament).

« As a 17yr old, I know that being able to fully comprehend even half of the book would be entirely out of my capability, but I don’t sympathise with those that condemn this book because of its ‘unreadability’.

« The point of a book is not in its readability, it is in its beauty, poetry, capacity and virtuosity, all of which Joyce accomplishes in the most breathtakingly masterful way.

« Its daunting obliqueness is part of the joy of reading it. It allows the sound, rhythm and pure auditory pleasure of the words to shine through. It becomes one long, tumultuous meditation on language, meaning and myth. Here’s to Joyce. »