Ulysses, Volume 1
Episodes 1-3
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
£0.00 for first 30 days
Buy Now for £17.99
No valid payment method on file.
We are sorry. We are not allowed to sell this product with the selected payment method
-
Narrated by:
-
Jim Norton
-
By:
-
James Joyce
About this listen
In the hands of Jim Norton and Marcella Riordan, experienced and stimulating Joycean readers, and carefully directed by Roger Marsh, Ulysses becomes accessible as never before. It is entertaining, immediate, funny, and rich in classical, philosophical, and musical allusion.
This is the first volume of James Joyce's Ulysses. To hear the entire epic day in the lives of Stephen Dedalus and Leopold Bloom, don't forget to listen to Volume 2 and Volume 3.(P)2004 NAXOS AudioBooks Ltd.Editor reviews
Critic reviews
What listeners say about Ulysses, Volume 1
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
-
Overall
- Glawsmole
- 21-07-07
The perfect aid to proper reading
I read Ulysses as a 20 year old and 20 years on I'm having a second go. The first time round, what struck me was that the lyrical beauty of the language would lend itself perfectly to just sitting back and having this remarkable work read to you.
I listened to a couple of hours and found that the stream of consciousness lead me to drift in and out of actually listening to what was being read to me.
I picked up my copy of the book and started to read along. Wow, what a difference. I never expected that.
This had to be the perfect way to read Ulysses. The thoughtful, thought-provoking, perfectly paced reading in audio drove the pace of my book reading perfectly while scanning the written words on the page kept my mind concentrated on what Mr Joyce had to say and stopped me drifting away into my own world (20 years ago I remember reading page after page before realising I had taken in nothing).
This really is the greatest book of the 20th century and this really is a beautiful reading of it. But I suggest that the combined effects of reading the book and listening at the same time are greater than the sum of their parts. Enjoy.
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.
You voted on this review!
You reported this review!
5 people found this helpful
-
Overall
- Francis
- 11-07-06
Ulysses - the ideal introduction
Ulysses can seem a daunting prospect to the reader approaching the novel for the first time. The stream of consciousness technique can seem puzzling and there is a bewildering mixture of styles. Jim Norton's superbly varied reading makes clear in episode after episode what Joyce is doing with language. Each paragraph, each sentence, each word in this reading has clearly been carefully considered and then interpreted with great dramatic skill. The general effect is that this reading provides a continually illuminating interpretation of the text which allows the novel to emerge as the great comical masterpiece and celebration of life that is.
All the varied people of Dublin on June 16th 1904 are brought vividly to life by Norton. The two principal characters Stephen Daedalus and Leopold Bloom are particularly well characterised. But even the most minor characters are convincingly rendered. Bloom's wife Molly is interpreted by Marcella Riordan - it is a very high compliment to say that on a smaller scale she matches Jim Norton's achievement.
An episode like the Cyclops brings out particularly well the illumination this reading brings to the text : the contrasts between the crude, 'one -eyed' account of the unnamed narrator, the hilarious parodies of various styles of writing inserted by Joyce, Bloom's ineffectual reasonableness, the Citizen's prejudice and egoism - all these are clear at once to the listener, whereas only the most attentive reading of the text would yield the same insight.
If anyone is approaching Ulysses the first time or has tried unsuccessfully to enter the world of Bloomsday before, this reading provides an ideal way into the novel, while those who know the novel well will find this reading constantly revealing. It is one of the rare audio books that are more enjoyable with repeated listening.
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.
You voted on this review!
You reported this review!
7 people found this helpful
-
Overall
- Steve
- 08-08-06
Ulysses - Outstanding
I've had a copy of Ulysses on my shelf for ten years or more and have never found the time or the commitment to get to grips with it. This recording is absolutely wonderful. I listen to nearly all Audible recordings whilst driving and Ulysses has made long journeys pass in an instant. The readers bring the book and characters to life and have had me howling with laughter whilst bowling along the motorways. Clearly this is a book that you can spend a lifetime unwrapping and I begin to see why it is often cited as being the greatest novel of the 20th century. That may be true or not but it is a very fine recording. Buy it.
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.
You voted on this review!
You reported this review!
10 people found this helpful
-
Overall
- Francis
- 11-07-06
Ulysses - the ideal introduction
Ulysses can seem a daunting prospect to the reader approaching the novel for the first time. The stream of consciousness technique can seem puzzling and there is a bewildering mixture of styles. Jim Norton's superbly varied reading makes clear in episode after episode what Joyce is doing with language. Each paragraph, each sentence, each word in this reading has clearly been carefully considered and then interpreted with great dramatic skill. The general effect is that this reading provides a continually illuminating interpretation of the text which allows the novel to emerge as the great comical masterpiece and celebration of life that is.
All the varied people of Dublin on June 16th 1904 are brought vividly to life by Norton. The two principal characters Stephen Daedalus and Leopold Bloom are particularly well characterised. But even the most minor characters are convincingly rendered. Bloom's wife Molly is interpreted by Marcella Riordan - it is a very high compliment to say that on a smaller scale she matches Jim Norton's achievement.
An episode like the Cyclops brings out particularly well the illumination this reading brings to the text : the contrasts between the crude, 'one -eyed' account of the unnamed narrator, the hilarious parodies of various styles of writing inserted by Joyce, Bloom's ineffectual reasonableness, the Citizen's prejudice and egoism - all these are clear at once to the listener, whereas only the most attentive reading of the text would yield the same insight.
If anyone is approaching Ulysses the first time or has tried unsuccessfully to enter the world of Bloomsday before, this reading provides an ideal way into the novel, while those who know the novel well will find this reading constantly revealing. It is one of the rare audio books that are more enjoyable with repeated listening.
Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.
You voted on this review!
You reported this review!
9 people found this helpful