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Dubliners  By  cover art

Dubliners

By: James Joyce
Narrated by: T. P. McKenna
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Publisher's summary

James Augustine Aloysius Joyce was born in 1882 in Dublin but spent most of his life living with Nora Barnacle in various parts of Europe. Apart from a collection of verse, Dubliners was his first published work in 1914. In Dubliners, Joyce portrays quite brilliantly human relationships in Ireland at the turn of the century. His characters are so vital and exciting and the stories so fresh, evocative, and entertaining that they could well have been written today.

Public Domain (P)2003 CSA Telltapes Ltd

Critic reviews

If you're looking for the single short story collection that epitomises the skill, subtlety, diversity and sheer brilliance of the genre, this has to be it. Season the mix with the voice of one of the greatest Irish actors ever, and you're talking about a true classic. (Sue Arnold, The Guardian)

What listeners say about Dubliners

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars

Why are the chapters scrambled?

This is a fine recording except that the tracks are all messed up, so it's like listening to a novel using "shuffle tracks"! It is a collection of short stories, but they are carefully sequenced, so it messes everything up to listen to them out of order. I found it so annoying that I cut the whole thing into individual tracks and renamed and renumbered them so I could listen to them in order. That was pretty time consuming, but at least I now have a set of .mp3 files -- one for each chapter and three for the long last chapter.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars

not the right order

I very much appreciated everything about this version of Dubliners except for one thing - the stories are not in the correct order. Joyce detailed the order for the stories in his letters and every version I have seen uses that order - it has a significance in terms of coming of age. But this version uses some other method - and it's not order of composition -although it may be the order of magazine publication - I don't know. I'd be curious to know why CSA (or whomever) did this. Other than that I was delighted with McKenna's rendition and if this ordering doesn't bother you, I recommend it.



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9 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars

Best Reading, Format Cumbersome

I agree mostly with what has been written so far. This is the best reading, but does not preserve the intended order. Also frustrating, is that the titles of the stories come at the end of the preceding chapters, rather than at the top of the actual chapters, so navigating to the correct order is even more difficult. I assembled this list for myself, and so thought I would share it:
(1) 5 The Sisters,
(2) 9 An Encounter,
(3) 3 Araby,
(4) 8 Eveline,
(5) 6 After the Race,
(6) 10 Two Gallants,
(7) 4 The Boarding House,
(8) 11 A Little Cloud,
(9) 14 Counterparts,
(10) 15 Clay.
(11) 1 A Painful Case,
(12) 12 Ivy Day in the Committee Room,
(13) 13 A Mother,
(14) 2 Grace,
(15) 7 The Dead,

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7 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars

Great reading, bizarre order

As someone else noted here, the order of the stories in this recording is not the original order; and so a large part of Joyce's design is lost. "Dubliners" works not so much because of the individual stories as because of the many connections between them. It's like one of those photo mosaics, where each square is a separate picture, but you have to stand back from it and look at it whole to "get" it. It's a shame, because McKenna's reading is otherwise the best, in my opinion, of the many readings available here. It would be nice if someone would take the trouble to rearrange them (and, in the process, add a 5-second delay between each story to let the "effect" sink in).

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4 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    5 out of 5 stars

Not too schmaltzy, not too dry, just right....

What made the experience of listening to Dubliners the most enjoyable?

Listening to a performance of the Dubliners gave life to the Joyce's written words.

Who was your favorite character and why?

For me, "After the Race" and "A Mother" are my favorite short stories in the Dubliners. James Joyce's writing is so subtly masterful and vivid at the same time.

What about T. P. McKenna’s performance did you like?

T P McKenna's performance, for me, was just right: Not too schmaltzy like some other narrators who really overdo the Irish accent and inflection; not too dead or lifeless like some of the drier readings which were further handicapped by fuzzy recordings; and, just like Goldilocks and the Three Bears, McKenna's readings had just the right amount of drama for me (I hear the words and visualize the actions and scenes) without off-putting, overly-melodramatic histrionics.

Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?

One sitting or fifteen (that's the number of short stories in the Dubliners), I enjoy this audiobook.

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