Gilbert provides insight into Ulysses which it is extremely doubt the reader can get alone. He provides the overall plan of the work, the diagram of each sentence and how it coordinates with all the categories which Joyce combined in constructing his encyclopediac work. Stuart was at one point close to Joyce and has much of his information from the master himself. I do not know if there is a better guide, but this as the first...
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James Joyce has more books written about him and his works than possibly anyone else in the english language - barring Shakespeare. There are countless guides through the labyrinth that is Ulysses, and all do their job well, some better than others. This one, by Stuart Gilbert, was the first and is still the best. Originally written in the thirties, it remains the definitive guide to Joyce's masterpiece of modernism. Gilbert...
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Gilbert has written a classic analysis of Ulysses . This book provides both the initiate and the fanatic with a broad basis for comprehension of Joyce. It include historical documentation of the settlement of Ireland, connections of Troy and Ireland, an interesting view of Viking/ Greek parallels, aspects of occult knowledge. Failure to read this and you will not get 1/3 of the intricacy of Joyces works.
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Joseph Campbell, an early Joycean scholar (see his A Skeleton Key to Finnegans Wake: Unlocking James Joyce's Masterwork) considered this the best reference for James Joyce's Ulysses: A Facsimile of the First Edition Published in Paris in 1922. My study of other exegetical references for Ulysses have confirmed Campbell's view. Author Stuart Gilbert was a close friend of Joyce, and in this book he unravels the numerous symbolic...
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