On January 13, 1941, Irish literary genius James Joyce died in Zurich after undergoing surgery for a perforated ulcer. The day after his death, English newspaper The Guardian published a fitting ...
When James Joyce's short story collection Dubliners was published on June 15th 1914 it was the end of a long and tortuous ...
James Joyce died in Zurich, Switzerland, on January 13, 1941, but how did the most famous chronicler of Dublin life end up being buried in Zurich? According to Richard Ellmann’s spectacular ...
Hence Joyce's books, which a few years ago we had to smuggle ... Joyce would caution us against a too complete identification. James Joyce was a rather more filial son than Stephen Dedalus ...
Buildings constructed out of words, characters made with such complexity that they can jump out the pages, and stories so vivid that it feels like one is reading an epic. These words describe James ...
Throughout the period covered by these letters, Mrs. Harold McCormick, daughter of John D, Rockefeller, gave Joyce a thousand ... dating from your earliest books and I feel now a ...
Taoiseach Jack Lynch expressed confusion after the family of James Joyce sought to have the famous author’s remains returned to Ireland and questioned what exactly they expected of the Government.
James Joyce wrote most of the short stories in his landmark collection ... The Thousand and One Nights is an ‘infinite text’: it has no fixed shape or length, no known author and is transformed with ...
James Joyce took over some of his private pupils ... children left Trieste for Switzerland leaving behind his furniture, books and some notebooks and papers (including the complete fair copy ...