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First thoughts:
Novel - executed in the fine tradition of the autobiographical novels of the European romantic movement.
Artist - an Epicurean with a studied bookish air and an affected intellectual confidence; narcissistic, if endearingly earnest; frightened away from his equals and home; looking for a worthy platform, to place the burden of the blame. An ‘artist’ only by self-definition who concludes too grandly and too futilely and too prematurely. Definitely no Künstlerroman. Can’t wait for th ...more

Beautiful! An impressionistic masterpiece.

Started reading Joyce's book Ulysses as one of my goals this year is to try to read through the list of the Modern Library's 100 best novels of the 20th Century. Ulysses is the first book on the list, but I thought it wise to first finish book #3 on the list, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, as the main character (Stephen Dedalus) is also a primary character is Ulysses.
While I am still pondering why some books are ranked as they are on the Modern Library's list, it is certainly a set of ...more
While I am still pondering why some books are ranked as they are on the Modern Library's list, it is certainly a set of ...more

I read this before my Goodreads.com days as one of the books discussed by the book group Great Books KC. This short review from PageADay's Book Lover's Calendar for 3/18/13 reminded me of it:
Arguably Ireland’s most well-regarded literary son, James Joyce wasn’t always an optimistic fellow, but he told a cracking good story. This is his first novel, which introduces us to Stephen Dedalus, who returns in Joyce’s novel Ulysses. This book laces together scenes from an Irish upbringing that closely h ...more
Arguably Ireland’s most well-regarded literary son, James Joyce wasn’t always an optimistic fellow, but he told a cracking good story. This is his first novel, which introduces us to Stephen Dedalus, who returns in Joyce’s novel Ulysses. This book laces together scenes from an Irish upbringing that closely h ...more

Parts of Portrait are brilliant, but the book as a whole has never quite gelled for me. Some scenes have stuck with me since I first read the book in high school. I still have days when I think I know just what it's like to be shoved into the square ditch. And the Christmas dinner argument is the epitome of holiday family disturbances. But the extended fire and brimstone sermon is a bit much for me nowadays, and young love was so much better expressed in Araby than it is in a Portrait, where it
...more

This was a pretty interesting and relevant read for this time in my life. I think my recent interest in Catholicism really helped with my understanding of this book, I’m not sure I would have gotten 1/2 of the illusions otherwise. The sermon on hell was pretty great also. I really sympathize with Stephen, I’ve sort of went thorough a similar life. I grew up in a Christian fundamentalist home, wrestled with it and my questions, abandoned my faith during my late teens early twenties, only in the e
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Aug 19, 2009
John J.
rated it
liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
100greatest-modernlibrary,
1001beforeyoudie

Apr 22, 2010
Rhingst
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
european-classics
