Dubliners

James Joyce
3.84
170,162 ratings 10,607 reviews
Form-defining short stories. First published in 1914, James Joyce defined what the short story could be with his collection, Dubliners. A mixture of prose and poetry, each story can be listened to independently, or as a collection. From childhood to maturity, we see what life - and ultimately death - can be, via an extraordinary cast of characters, all of whom experience an epiphany. There’s Father Flynn, the priest; Evelyn, the shop girl who dreams of escape; Mrs Mooney, the butcher’s daughter, who runs a boarding house. Joyce described the stories as ‘a moral history of my country’. Written by a young Joyce, with the devastating potato famine still in living memory, he wanted to explore the reasons why a city and its occupants could be so paralysed. For the modern listener, the stories also provide a fascinating snapshot of early 20th-century life - from clay pipes to sixpences, petticoats to ginger beer. In your mind’s eye, walk round Stephen’s Green, wander down Grafton Street and over the River Liffey. You’ll never forget this city or its occupants. The stories: 'The Sisters' 'An Encounter' 'Araby' 'Eveline' 'After the Race' 'Two Gallants' 'The Boarding House' 'A Little Cloud' 'Counterparts' 'Clay' 'A Painful Case' 'Ivy Day in the Committee Room' 'A Mother' 'Grace' 'The Dead' Public Domain (P)2021 Audible, Ltd
Genres: ClassicsFictionShort StoriesIrelandLiteratureIrish Literature20th CenturyHistorical FictionLiterary FictionSchool
8 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
49363 (29%)
4 star
62666 (37%)
3 star
42667 (25%)
2 star
11855 (7%)
1 star
3611 (2%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by James Joyce

Lists with this book

How High We Go in the Dark
The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories
A Visit from the Goon Squad
[ATY 2025] A Collection
380 books68 voters