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In an age where the most publicized fiction tends to be simple-minded and genre-bound, it's refreshing to come across a writer with Joyce's complexity. "Dubliners" is so rich in its intellectual and symbolic atmosphere that many readers may be put off by the overall weight of the prose. The writing is so thick with metaphorical contexts that the literal content of the story occasionally becomes obscured, which can be frustrating for those not used to reading Joyce. Yet, while difficult, "Dubliners" is far from impossible to decipher, and although these stories function well as a whole, they are also more or less self-contained, which makes "Dubliners" easier to get through than Joyce's other works(it's a lot easier to take on a ten page short story than a 600+ page novel like "Ulysses" or "Finnegan's Wake"). For readers who are new to Joyce, this would be a good place to start.
A final note: since this book is old enough to be considered a "classic," there are a plethora of editions available from various publishers. I own the Vintage edition (ISBN: 0679739904). Not only is it a quality printing (not that cheap newspaper ink that rubs off on your fingers), it also contains about a hundred pages of criticism at the end that help shed light on Joyce's often illusive themes. Normally I shun forewards and afterwards (I like to think I've read enough to discover a story's theme on my own), but in the case of Joyce I found that a push in right direction can mean the difference between enjoyment and frustration.
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The story flows like oceans of pages, with each chapter entailing a different characters point of view of the story. Written in the same style as Bret Easton Ellis' The Rules Of Attraction, one cannot put the book to rest, and even when you do finally finish this gripping novel one doesn't feel at rest with what they have just absorbed. In The Forest is a desolate street on a late winters evening, or a terrible rainstorm pelting a kitchen window. It hits you in all the right places, leaving you soaking with imaginative images of Michens journey, left only to fend for yourself.
The characters in this epic all have their own agenda, while at the same time drawn to Michen's search. In The Forest is a graphic mass of hysteria that will keep one sitting on the edge of their bed way after you have completed your journey with Michen. That is what is best about in the forest. You feel sympathy for Michen, and you become partners with him in his unrelenting quest for freedom and normalcy. In The Forest is a tale you definitely suggest and tell to others, it is one to keep on the shelf next to JD Salingers CATCHER IN THE RYE, where the great storys of adolescence belong.
O'Brien creates eerie suspense with the best of them, though it is not rewarded (like I said, it's not about the gory details). The small, rustic towns of Ireland (complete with authentic gaelic names) in which the story takes place adds to the spookiness, much like in the movie "Fargo". The unsympathetic woods in the backdrop that stand witness to the horror add another dimension to the criminal/society theme that I mentioned before. My only complaint is that the story just tapers off at the end, not really consistent with the rest of the book.
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Although she argues (without convincing me) that Joyce was not a misogynist, she does not attempt to defend him from being viewed as a monster; instead, she answers her question "Do writers have to be such monsters in order to create? I believe that they do."
O'Brien provides interesting responses to Joyce's life and lifework. Hard-core Joyceans will already have processed Ellman's biography--regarded by some as the best biography of any writer ever written. The somewhat curious have a fine guide in O'Brien. Her book is generally readable, and I am inclined to trust her sense (as a novelist, as an Irish novelist) of what in Joyce's fiction is autobiographical.
The volume is an excellent match of biographer and subject, like Edmund White's biographical meditation on Marcel Proust that began the series of Penguin Brief Lives, a welcome antidote to the mountains of details that make so many biographies daunting.
The very first sentence of this book invites you into Joyce with an imitation of his writing style, & after that Edna O'Brien shares generously & mellifluously her great understanding of the man, his life, & his work, drawing on scholarly commentary of his books & from the journals & letters of him & the people around him so that you know how they all felt about his life & their lives in themselves & for the purposes of this biography in relation to him. It's so well-written & so interesting -- what a life he had, crazy as he was, that -- I could hardly put it down. Edna O'Brien's great interest in him comes across truly.
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This is how the story begins with the arrival of the enemy -- a brick red tractor that has shown up on the fields, stuck as it was in the mud, with a driver aboard -- one Michael Bugler, noted to be a fine speciman of a man. Is it the tractor who is the enemy or the passenger? Bugler has come to claim land that he has recently inherited. There is one problem though -- part of this land is on what Joseph Brennan considers to be "his mountain". The second problem is that Joseph Brennan has a beautiful sister named Breege who has become giddy over the arrival of the new tractor and its driver. O'Brien writes that "the tractor was music to her ears and a gall to her brother's."
What follows is a fight for land, a fight for love and a struggle to keep one's sanity when all else around you has gone haywire.
Edna O'Brien writes a story laced with impending doom. You know something will happen....you just don't know how bad it will be. As she tells us, "one mad minute stretches into a lifetime." That quote is so true because you can be a model citizen for 364 days of the year and do something bad on that 365th day and the goodness is forgotten and all that remains is that one bad day.
As much as I like stories set in Ireland, this one dragged for me. I felt no kinship to the characters and, while I understood their motivations, I felt no empathy toward them. Yes, "the warring sons of warring sons are sent to repossess ground gone forever" and I'm sure love triangles and tragedy are part of the scenario. I just didn't walk away from this reading experience with any sense of satisfaction in having read this book. This is just my humble opinion and I have rated this book solely based on my enjoyment factor...certainly no indication of the author's ability as a writer.
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Very quietly and methodically tragic, in the Irish way that says you do not whine about tragedy, you do not make fuss of it, you just simply pray a bit and go on. What makes the book so very valuable and unusual is that it applies the Irish knack for storytelling and forthright 'un-tragic' tragedy to women's lives and women's stories. It is both an Irish book full of water and woodsmoke, and a women's book in all its painful honesty and revelatory grace.
Please read.
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I looked forward to reading this politically motivated Irish story but found it to be only average. The narrative shifts needlessly throughout the book. Also, the characters are ambiguous in their feelings. For example, Josie barely knew her husband when she married him out of desperation. The marriage was a nightmare from day one, but years later she tenderly runs her fingers through the initials he carved on a tree and she saves his clothing and other belongings and holds them closely as she reminisces? Lastly, O'Brien's long-winded sentences and verbose prose detract from the story instead of enhancing it. The following is a sample sentence from page 94: "He'd love to take her off then, him and Nellie, across the lake and up the lordly Shannon, the Pilgrim's Way, a thing he'd always wanted to do, go through the big locks and the swing bridges, find a mooring at dusk, up to the town to a pub, wakening to the breath of nature, the herons, the grebe, and the mute swan, all around the hills bestirring themselves, heaving up out of the plains, blue and lilac, hills magnifying into the mountains." Whew! Believe it or not almost every sentence in the story reads as such.
The disjointed approach and wordiness of the book makes me only marginally recommend it to those, such as myself, who have a keen interest in the struggles of the Irish. However, if looking merely for entertainment, I'd skip by House of Splendid Isolation.
O'Brien writes in luxuriant prose, but it's that kind of writing where you think there are sentences or words missing. She seems to assume that you understand more than you do.
But the bigger flaw in the book, is her misunderstanding (shared by many) of the Irish troubles in their modern form. She sees them as something intrinsic to Ireland and the Irish, a bitter violent history seeping from the soil. In fact, the really violent period of Irish history was an outgrowth of the Cold War. The struggle had long ceased to be about Ireland & unity & had devolved into a simple matter of radical Left opposition to the British. As a result, the collapse of the Soviet Union has taken the IRA with it & brought an end to the "troubles".
That said, her unique prose style & her obvious empathy for her characters, make this one a marginally worthwhile read.
GRADE: C