“4 Key Works by James Joyce You Need to Read”
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@Nickiquote Finnegans Wake and Gravity's Rainbow are two of the most impenetrable books I've ever suffered through.
@alexpsmith You finished them?! Woah. The last sentence of Ulysses was my death.
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@alexpsmith You finished them?! Woah. The last sentence of Ulysses was my death.
@mms I read Ulysses in uni so I had to finish. Hated every moment.
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@mms I read Ulysses in uni so I had to finish. Hated every moment.
@alexpsmith @mms me too. Ugh.
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@Nickiquote Finnegans Wake and Gravity's Rainbow are two of the most impenetrable books I've ever suffered through.
@alexpsmith @Nickiquote Some writers seem to think that reading is a punishment or an act of masochism.
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@alexpsmith @Nickiquote Some writers seem to think that reading is a punishment or an act of masochism.
@simonwilliamson @Nickiquote Thomas Pynchon can bite me.
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“4 Key Works by James Joyce You Need to Read”
You absolutely do not need to read Finnegans Wake. This is a flat lie.
There is no Finnegans Wake Enforcement Service. You will not be fined for failing to read over a thousand pages of impenetrable neologisms.
There is no mandatory test to see if you know what Finnegans Wake means. The plot and characters of Finnegans Wake are not regular pub quiz questions.
No-one will even give you a badge for reading Finnegans Wake, although they should.
@Nickiquote As an English major,, I confess that I find that James Joyce is absolutely annoying. I selected modules to avoid him.
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“4 Key Works by James Joyce You Need to Read”
You absolutely do not need to read Finnegans Wake. This is a flat lie.
There is no Finnegans Wake Enforcement Service. You will not be fined for failing to read over a thousand pages of impenetrable neologisms.
There is no mandatory test to see if you know what Finnegans Wake means. The plot and characters of Finnegans Wake are not regular pub quiz questions.
No-one will even give you a badge for reading Finnegans Wake, although they should.
@Nickiquote I would have thought some kind of therapy would be better.

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“4 Key Works by James Joyce You Need to Read”
You absolutely do not need to read Finnegans Wake. This is a flat lie.
There is no Finnegans Wake Enforcement Service. You will not be fined for failing to read over a thousand pages of impenetrable neologisms.
There is no mandatory test to see if you know what Finnegans Wake means. The plot and characters of Finnegans Wake are not regular pub quiz questions.
No-one will even give you a badge for reading Finnegans Wake, although they should.
@Nickiquote The only Finnegans Wake I've endured is the Dubliners song.
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“4 Key Works by James Joyce You Need to Read”
You absolutely do not need to read Finnegans Wake. This is a flat lie.
There is no Finnegans Wake Enforcement Service. You will not be fined for failing to read over a thousand pages of impenetrable neologisms.
There is no mandatory test to see if you know what Finnegans Wake means. The plot and characters of Finnegans Wake are not regular pub quiz questions.
No-one will even give you a badge for reading Finnegans Wake, although they should.
@Nickiquote Fortunately we have Campbell's "Skeleton Key to Finnegans Wake" and the "Exagmination Round His Factification" to stand in as somewhat less impenetrable glosses.
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@alexpsmith @mms me too. Ugh.
@swisslet @alexpsmith @mms I actually quite like a lot of Ulysses. Not all of it though.
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@swisslet @alexpsmith @mms I actually quite like a lot of Ulysses. Not all of it though.
@Nickiquote @swisslet @mms Perhaps I need to try again as a mature (*ahem!!*) adult.
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@Nickiquote @swisslet @mms Perhaps I need to try again as a mature (*ahem!!*) adult.
@alexpsmith @Nickiquote @mms I’m inclined to think that life is too short and my pile of unread books too big (he says, having just read LOTR again and embarking on a re-read of the 3 Musketeers books).
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@alexpsmith @Nickiquote @mms I’m inclined to think that life is too short and my pile of unread books too big (he says, having just read LOTR again and embarking on a re-read of the 3 Musketeers books).
@swisslet @alexpsmith @Nickiquote As someone who is 70% in their first read of 3 musketeers: it's an amazing book!
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I really wish someone could tell this to me in my 20s... poor thing.
I think Finnegans Wake could be a transcendent experience for some people with the right background in Irish history and language but it's just not a book that was written for everyone to just ... read. It's a translation project.
Why exactly it was on so many lists of "must read" books that I encountered as a kid I will never understand. I would have been better off reading untranslated Beowulf.
Yes I'm a little annoyed about this.
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@swisslet @alexpsmith @Nickiquote As someone who is 70% in their first read of 3 musketeers: it's an amazing book!
@mms @alexpsmith @Nickiquote it’s a scream from start to finish. I love that D’Artagnan is such a prat. It’s the book that got me over my fear of “classic” novels after school and university. Turns out that some of them are absolute bangers. I think this book and its sequels were the first things I ever bought on Amazon in about 1999.
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I think Finnegans Wake could be a transcendent experience for some people with the right background in Irish history and language but it's just not a book that was written for everyone to just ... read. It's a translation project.
Why exactly it was on so many lists of "must read" books that I encountered as a kid I will never understand. I would have been better off reading untranslated Beowulf.
Yes I'm a little annoyed about this.
But when I was younger I thought that "great writing" and a "great book" was a more intrinsic platonic sort of object.
I wanted to write great stories, so I was curious about anything that people called "great" ... this meant that I spent way too much time trying to find a way into an impenetrable text. It was a mean joke to play putting a book like that on those lists.
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@Nickiquote In my English degree the tutor suggested going to a shop and flicking through Finnegan's Wake and Ulysses to get an idea of what they were like but not to actually read them. It wasn't the most prestigious establishment tbh.
@internetsdairy @Nickiquote That tutor needs to suffer something painful. It's possible that a page or two of FW is sufficient to get an idea (though I would disagree), but there are 18 chapters in Ulysses in 18 different styles.
I'm definitely in the wrong discussion (I fell in love with JJ at 21 and reread Ulysses every year or two. FW I've only read straight through twice, but I reread chunks of it pretty often.)
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But when I was younger I thought that "great writing" and a "great book" was a more intrinsic platonic sort of object.
I wanted to write great stories, so I was curious about anything that people called "great" ... this meant that I spent way too much time trying to find a way into an impenetrable text. It was a mean joke to play putting a book like that on those lists.
@futurebird @Nickiquote i've found finnegans wake nice to skim here and there, enjoying random words/sentences/paragraphs and not trying to read it in a linear way like a novel. it's crazy to put it on that kind of recommendation list especially for people who are not literature nerds, lots of classics are so easy to pick up and trying something that difficult & obscure could be really demotivating if you end up with the impression that Big Important Books generally are like that

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“4 Key Works by James Joyce You Need to Read”
You absolutely do not need to read Finnegans Wake. This is a flat lie.
There is no Finnegans Wake Enforcement Service. You will not be fined for failing to read over a thousand pages of impenetrable neologisms.
There is no mandatory test to see if you know what Finnegans Wake means. The plot and characters of Finnegans Wake are not regular pub quiz questions.
No-one will even give you a badge for reading Finnegans Wake, although they should.
@Nickiquote I feel this way about JRR Tolkien's works, too. Except that it seems to be pub quiz stuff. Good thing that I don't enjoy pub quizzes much, either.
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I think Finnegans Wake could be a transcendent experience for some people with the right background in Irish history and language but it's just not a book that was written for everyone to just ... read. It's a translation project.
Why exactly it was on so many lists of "must read" books that I encountered as a kid I will never understand. I would have been better off reading untranslated Beowulf.
Yes I'm a little annoyed about this.
@futurebird @Nickiquote I love Finnegan's wake! But trying to understand it is futile. It is like music on paper, it's rythm and sounds are delicious. I haven't finished it, but that doesn't really matter - reading it as a story is impossible anyway. I will never find out what happens, and that's fine. The proze is just amazing.