Books by James Joyce

Portrait of James Joyce

James Joyce stands as one of the defining figures of twentieth‑century literature, renowned for his daring use of language and form. From the intimate realism of Dubliners to the stream‑of‑consciousness brilliance of Ulysses, his work captures the spirit and complexity of modern life through the streets and voices of Dublin.

Joyce's influence extends far beyond his native Ireland, shaping the course of modern fiction with his innovative narrative techniques and deep psychological insight. His writing rewards attentive readers with wit, humanity and a remarkable sense of place, ensuring his continued presence at the heart of literary study and enjoyment.

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137 products


  • A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    WW Norton & Co A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man is a work essential to a complete understanding of the Modernist movement. The Norton Critical Edition presents Joyce’s novel impeccably edited by Hans Walter Gabler and a series of background and critical essays astutely chosen by John Paul Riquelme. It will enhance any high school, college, or graduate course in which it is taught." -- Michael Patrick Gillespie, Florida International University

    1 in stock

    £16.40

  • Dubliners

    Vintage Publishing Dubliners

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisJames Joyce (Author) James Joyce was born on 2 February 1882 in Dublin. He studied modern languages at University College, Dublin. After graduating, Joyce moved to Paris for a brief period in 1902. In 1904 Joyce met Nora Barnacle, with whom he would spend the rest of his life and they moved to Europe and settled in Trieste where Joyce worked as a teacher. His first published work was a book of poems called Chamber Music (1907). This was followed by Dubliners (1914), A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916) and the play Exiles (1918). In 1915 the First World War forced Joyce and Nora and their two children to move to Zürich. Joyce's most famous novel, Ulysses, was published in Paris in 1922. In the same year he started work on his last great book, Finnegan's Wake (1939). James Joyce died in Zürich on 13 January 1941.John Banville (Introducer) John Banville was born in Wexford, Ireland in 1945. His first book, Long Lankin, was published in 1970. His other books are Nightspawn; Birchwood; Doctor Copernicus, which won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize in 1976; Kepler, which was awarded the Guardian Fiction Prize in 1981; The Newton Letter, which was filmed for Channel 4; Mefisto and The Book of Evidence, which was shortlisted for the 1989 Booker Prize and won the 1989 Guinness Peat Aviation Award. John Banville is literary editor of the Irish Times and lives in London with his wife and two sons.Trade ReviewJoyce's stories remain undimmed in their brilliance * Sunday Times *Dubliners is interested in all of us, rich and poor, old and young, men and women. It's filled with humour and love, pain and loss. Above all, it rings out with a love of these streets, of the voices of the people who inhabit them -- John BoyneTruly exhilarating...a vivid, detailed and breathtaking portrait of a city and its citizens * Irish Times *

    4 in stock

    £9.99

  • Exiles

    Oxford University Press Exiles

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisJames Joyce's only surviving play has divided Joyceans for a century. Illuminating the themes of performance that are so prominent throughout Joyce's fiction, Exiles sees Joyce staking his claim definitively within the European theatrical tradition.Trade ReviewThe book is complete with Walsh's useful notes and a well-established text and can safely be recommended to students. * Valérie Bénéjam, James Joyce Quarterly *Table of ContentsIntroduction Composition and Publication History Select Bibliography A Chronology of James Joyce EXILES Appendix A: 'Ibsen's New Drama' Appendix B: 'The Day of the Rabblement' Explanatory Notes

    3 in stock

    £8.54

  • Dubliners James Joyce Penguin Essentials 28

    Penguin Books Ltd Dubliners James Joyce Penguin Essentials 28

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsis''Snow was general all over Ireland. It was falling on every part of the dark central plain, on the treeless hills, falling softly upon the Bog of Allen and, farther westward, softly falling into the dark mutinous Shannon waves.''From a child grappling with the death of a fallen priest, to a young woman''s dilemma over whether to elope to Argentina with her lover, to the dance party at which a man discovers just how little he really knows about his wife, these fifteen stories bring the gritty realism of existence in Joyce''s native Dublin to life.Trade ReviewJoyce's early stories remain undimmed in their brilliance * Sunday Times *Joyce celebrates the lives of ordinary men and women -- Anthony Burgess * Observer *In Joyce's eyes Dublin is the whole world -- J.G. Ballard

    15 in stock

    £8.54

  • Cambridge University Press The Cambridge Ulysses The 1922 Text with Essays

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisJames Joyce''s Ulysses is considered one of the greatest novels of the twentieth century. This new edition ? first published in 2022 to celebrate the centenary of the book''s first publication ? helps readers to understand the pleasures of this monumental work and to grapple with its challenges. Copiously equipped with maps, photographs, and explanatory footnotes, it provides a vivid and illuminating context for the experiences of Leopold Bloom, Stephen Dedalus, and Molly Bloom, as well as Joyce''s many other Dublin characters, on June 16, 1904. Featuring a facsimile of the historic 1922 Shakespeare and Company text, this version includes Joyce''s own errata as well as references to amendments made in later editions. Each of the eighteen chapters of Ulysses is introduced by a leading Joyce scholar. These richly informative pieces discuss the novel''s plot and allusions, while exploring crucial questions that have puzzled and tantalized readers over the last hundred years.

    15 in stock

    £85.50

  • A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    Union Square & Co. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisJames Joyce's semi-autobiographical first novel explores the author's own love-hate relationship with Ireland through Stephen Dedalus, Joyce's literary alter ego. Dedalus yearns to be an artist, but must first overcome the aspects of Irish society, like school and the church, that he feels restrains his creativity and stifles his soul.

    2 in stock

    £7.99

  • Pan Macmillan A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisJames Joyce's first novel follows the life of Stephen Dedalus, an artistic and fiercely individual young man. Along the way, Stephen learns to negotiate the 'snares of the world', to avoid the pitfalls of his dysfunctional family, his terrifying and repressive boarding school, and the various beautiful young ladies who capture his heart. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man is an unforgettable depiction of childhood and adolescence, as well as a lyrical evocation of life in Ireland over a century ago. It shocked readers on its publication in 1916 and it is now regarded as one of the most significant literary works of the twentieth century.This beautiful Macmillan Collector's Library edition of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man features an afterword by Peter Harness.Designed to appeal to the booklover, the Macmillan Collector's Library is a series of beautiful gift editions of much loved classic titles. Macmillan Collector's Library are books to love and treasure.

    2 in stock

    £10.44

  • A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    Quercus Publishing A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    2 in stock

    Book Synopsis''A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man begins with one of the most arresting opening sentences in literature'' Patrick McGuinness, from his Preface.A Portrait first appeared in instalments in the modernist magazine The Egoist in 1914, before it came out as a book in 1916, the year of the Easter Rising against British rule in Ireland. An autobiographical ''coming of age'' story, A Portrait is Joyce''s first novel. Many elements of Joyce''s own life - his Catholic schooling, his family circumstances and his father''s financial difficulties, as well as his sexual, political and artistic awakenings - are fictionalized and in it he skilfully extend the English language, as it opens with a child''s voice rendered by a third-person narrator, and closes with the mature Stephen''s first-person reflections.

    2 in stock

    £9.49

  • A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    Arcturus Publishing Ltd A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £6.99

  • A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    Flame Tree Publishing A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisLittle treasures, the FLAME TREE COLLECTABLE CLASSICS are chosen to create a delightful and timeless home library. Each stunning, gift edition features deluxe cover treatments, ribbon markers, luxury endpapers and gilded edges. The unabridged text is accompanied by a Glossary of Victorian and Literary terms produced for the modern reader. James Joyce’s first novel, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916) is a captivating evocation of the emotional, intellectual and creative coming of age of the young Stephen Dedalus, essentially Joyce’s alter ego. The originality and inventiveness of its modernist style prefigures Joyce’s yet more experimental masterpiece Ulysses and offers a profound, poetic insight into Joyce himself as well as a personal journey of awakening and rebellion.

    1 in stock

    £8.54

  • Ulysses

    Everyman Ulysses

    1 in stock

    James Joyce's masterpiece, Ulysses, tells of the diverse events which befall Leopold Bloom and Stephen Dedalus in Dublin on one day in June 1904. It is considered to be one of the most important works of modernist literature and was hailed as a work of genius by W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot and Ernest Hemingway. Scandalously frank, wittily erudite, mercurially eloquent, resourcefully comic and generously humane, Ulysses offers the reader a life-changing experience

    1 in stock

    £19.00

  • A Shorter Finnegans Wake

    Galileo Publishers A Shorter Finnegans Wake

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £10.44

  • Chamber Music

    Double 9 Books Chamber Music

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisJames Joyce's book of poems titled Chamber Music was released by Elkin Mathews in May 1907. There were originally thirty-four love poems in the anthology, but two more were added before it was published (All day I hear the noise of waters and I hear an army charging upon the land). Although it is widely believed that the title refers to the sound of urine tinkling in a chamber pot, this is a later Joycean embellishment that gives an earthiness to a title that was initially proposed by his brother Stanislaus and that Joyce (by the time of publication) had come to dislike: The reason I dislike Chamber Music as a title is that it is too complacent, he admitted to Arthur Symons in 1906. I would prefer a title that criticized the work while avoiding outright trashing it. Chamber Music's poetry isn't at all racy or evocative of the sound of tinkling urine, in fact. The poems were well-received by critics despite poor sales (less than half of the original print run of 500 had been sold in the first year).

    1 in stock

    £9.25

  • The Dead and Other Stories

    Broadview Press Ltd The Dead and Other Stories

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThat James Joyce’s “The Dead” forms an extraordinary conclusion to his collection Dubliners, there can be no doubt. But as many have pointed out, “The Dead” may equally well be read as a novella—arguably, one of the finest novellas ever written.“The Dead,” a “story of public life,” as Joyce categorized it, was written more than a year after Joyce had finished the other stories in the collection, and was meant to redress what he felt was their “unnecessary harsh[ness].” Set on the feast of the epiphany, it is a haunting tale of connection and of alienation, reflecting, in the words of Stanislaus Joyce (James’s brother and confidant), “the nostalgic love of a rejected exile.”The present volume highlights “The Dead” for readers who wish to focus on that great work in a concise volume—and for university courses in which it is not possible to cover all of Dubliners. But it also gives a strong sense of how that story is part of a larger whole. Stories from each of the other sections of Dubliners have been included, and a wide range of background materials is included as well, providing a vivid sense of the literary and historical context out of which the work emerged.Trade Review“A superbly framed selection of five stories from Dubliners, with judicious footnotes right on the page where readers need them and a vivid set of background materials that will be especially helpful for new students of Joyce. This Broadview edition contains the contextual and scholarly richness of a full critical edition, but in a tightly pruned and wisely packaged short form.” — Jed Esty, University of Pennsylvania“The Broadview edition of stories from Dubliners is an attractive, aptly illustrated addition to the collections of Joyce’s shorter writings available to students and teachers. Its five revealingly annotated stories represent well the full range of Dubliners’ fifteen tales, from beginning to end. They are supplemented by a well-informed introduction, letters to and from key figures involved in the book’s coming into being, interesting and relevant historical and literary contextual material, and reviews presenting diverse responses to Dubliners at its appearance as a book by a little-known author. Readers of this edition will be well pleased by its compact character and its depth.” — John Paul Riquelme, Boston UniversityTable of ContentsIntroductionThe SistersArabyEvelineA Little CloudThe DeadIn ContextA. Joyce’s Other Writings from James Joyce, “James Clarence Mangan” (1902) from James Joyce, “Ireland, Island of Saints and Sages” (1907) from James Joyce, “Gas from a Burner” (1912) B. Letters From George Russell To Nora Barnacle To Stanislaus Joyce To Grant Richards C. Historical Contexts from The Objects of Inghinidhe na hÉireann, United Irishman(13 October 1900) from Mary Butler, “Some Suggestions as to How Irishwomen May Help the Irish Language Movement,” Gaelic League Pamphlet No. 6 (1901) Women and Catholic Church Choirs from “The Singers,” Tra le Sollecitudini, Motu Proprio(22 November 1903) from Papal Letter to the Cardinal Vicar of Rome (8 December1903) from “Women Students,” Final Report of the Commissioners of the Royal Commission on Trinity College, Dublin, and the University of Dublin (1907) D. Literary Contexts from John McCall, The Life of James Clarence Mangan (1887) from E.Œ Somerville and Martin Ross, The Real Charlotte (1894) Berkeley Campbell, “The Old Watchman,” The Irish Homestead (2 July 1904) E. Songs Thomas Moore, “O, Ye Dead” (1808) Frederic Clay and W.G. Wills, “I’ll Sing Thee Songs of Araby”(1877) F. Reviews from Anonymous, Times Literary Supplement (18 June 1914) from Anonymous, Athenaeum (20 June 1914) from Ezra Pound, “Dubliners and Mr. James Joyce,” The Egoist (15 July 1914)

    10 in stock

    £13.95

  • Dubliners

    WW Norton & Co Dubliners

    Book Synopsis

    £9.67

  • Ulysses: (riverrun editions)

    Quercus Publishing Ulysses: (riverrun editions)

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsis'It is not that Ulysses excludes us; it is, rather, that it includes us in ways that no other work prepares us for. The question is not 'what is a novel?', but what can a novel be? Ulysses is the answer'Patrick McGuinness from his preface to Ulysses: The Restored TextInitially rejected by several printers in Dublin and London for containing 'obscene' content, Ulysses was first published in book form in a limited-edition printing of 1000 copies by Shakespeare and Company in Paris in 1922. A subsequent printing was impounded by US customs and for a period the novel was famed for its notoriety rather than its literary achievement.Like its author, Ulysses exists in a complicated push-pull relationship with its language - English - and its setting - Ireland. Joyce returns to the themes that had preoccupied him in previous works, including nationalism and empire, religion, identity and sex in a novel which gloriously brings Dublin on June 16th 1904 to the page.This edition of Ulysses: The Restored Text includes the revisions that Joyce made to the novel during his lifetime.

    15 in stock

    £8.79

  • Dubliners

    Broadview Press Ltd Dubliners

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis group of fifteen brief narratives connected by a place and a time, the city of Dublin at the beginning of the twentieth century, was written when James Joyce was a precocious young graduate of University College. With great subtlety and artistic restraint, Joyce suggests what lies beneath the pieties of Dublin society and its surface drive for respectability, suggesting the difficulties and despairs that were being endured on a daily basis in homes, pubs, streets, and offices of the city: underemployment, domestic violence, alcoholism, poverty, hunger, emotional and sexual repression. No writer ever took more seriously the details, history, and culture of a particular place than Joyce did with his home city, and these stories combine dark humor with compassion and a searching eye for the causes of suffering.This new edition's historical appendices include contemporary reviews (including one by Ezra Pound) and materials on religion, the struggle for Irish independence, and Dublin's musical and performance culture.Trade Review“Keri Walsh’s Broadview edition of Dubliners will deepen and enliven any reader’s experience of Joyce’s book. Included here are extensive appendices of primary materials that contextualize Joyce’s fictional world in terms of Ireland’s social, cultural, religious, and economic history, and in terms of the book’s troubled publication history, its early reception, and its place in literary history. Walsh’s introductory essay lays out the stakes of Joyce’s fraught relationship with Dublin and its denizens with clarity, concision, wit, and readability. Nowhere else have I read Joyce’s early life and work so essentially distilled, and rarely have I read Dubliners so artfully described. I expect Walsh’s Broadview edition of Dubliners to be around for a long time to come.” - Michael Rubenstein, Stony Brook University“Keri Walsh, as we already know from her collection of Sylvia Beach’s letters, is an archivist who blends the conscience of an ethnographer with the touch of a lover. She has achieved something genuinely exhilarating in this edition of Dubliners - transformed us into Joyce’s contemporaries while simultaneously renewing the book as a contemporary text, richly teachable and learnable, for twenty-first century readers, students, and scholars.” - Saikat Majumdar, author of Prose of the World: Modernism and the Banality of Empire“In an age when anthologized literary may give students the impression that the texts they are given to study arrived already canonized, Walsh’s approach - the provision of text, subtext, pretext, and context - allows an appreciation of the contingency of both creation and reputation, and is therefore an approach full of merit.” - Stephen Whittaker, James Joyce Literary Supplement“Walsh’s entertaining prose moves competently and gracefully among many aspects of Dublin life and Irish history that have an immediate bearing on the stories…Deftly juggling and ordering so many layers of concerns, Walsh’s essay gives and ideal opening performance, drawing out questions and alerting readers to the details and controversies of the stories while refraining from editorializing or providing a simple, singular answer. In this sense, it makes a nicely polished critical looking glass that opens up many reflective possibilities for readers of Dubliners…The stories are evenly and skillfully annotated by Walsh; the level and depth of her notes also sustain the historical and cultural contexts developed in the critical essay and supplementary materials…Her annotative style is disciplined and concise, providing just the right amount of information about archaic vocabulary or arcane allusions. At their best, her annotations show readers the active interpretive choices that confront them in particular moments.” - Greg Winston, James Joyce QuarterlyTable of Contents Appendix A: Contemporary Reviews Times Literary Supplement (18 June 1914) Athenaeum (20 June 1914) New Statesman (27 June 1914) Everyman Review (3 July 1914) Academy (11 July 1914) From Ezra Pound, ""Dubliners and Mr. James Joyce,"" The Egoist (15 July 1914) The Irish Book Lover (November 1914) Appendix B: Literary Contexts From Matthew Arnold, ""On the Study of Celtic Literature"" (1867) From Padraic Colum, ""With James Joyce in Ireland"" (1922) From Henry James, ""The Story-Teller at Large: Mr. Henry Harland"" (April 1898) From Emile Zola, Preface to Thérése Raquin: A Realistic Novel (1887) Caroline Norton, ""The Arab's Farewell to His Horse"" (c. 1830) From W.B. Yeats, ""Ireland and the Arts"" (1903) From John Eglinton, ""The Philosophy of the Celtic Movement"" (1918) Appendix C: Dublin Musical and Performance Culture From Augusta Gregory, ""West Irish Ballads"" (1903) Charles Dibdin, ""The Lass that Loves a Sailor"" (1811) George Linley, ""Arrayed for the Bridal"" (1835) Anonymous, ""The Lass of Aughrim"" (date unknown) Alfred Bunn and Michael William Balfe, ""I Dreamt that I Dwelt in Marble Halls"" (1843) ""Dougherty's Boarding House,"" Wheman Bros.' Pocket Size Irish Song Book (1909) Appendix D: Emigration From Rev. Michael J. Henry, ""A Century of Irish Emigration"" (1900) From Maud Gonne, ""Ways of Checking Emigration"" (15 October 1901) Philip Francis Little, ""Farewell to the Land"" (1901) From Sophie Raffalovich O'Brien, ""Parents and Children"" (1904) Appendix E: Religion, Home Rule, and the Struggle for Independence From Charles Stewart Parnell's Address in Cork (22 January 1885) From Katharine Tynan, ""The Parnell Split"" (1912) From Filson Young, ""Holy Ireland"" (1903) Maud Gonne, ""The Famine Queen"" (7 April 1900) From Michael J.F. McCarthy, ""In Catholic Dublin"" (1903)

    3 in stock

    £18.00

  • Oxford Bookworms Library Level 6 Dubliners

    Oxford University Press Oxford Bookworms Library Level 6 Dubliners

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisClassics, modern fiction, non-fiction and more. Written for secondary and adult students the Oxford Bookworms Library has seven reading levels from A1-C1 of the CEFR.Dublin, Ireland, in the early years of the twentieth century. It is a poor city, and there is hard drinking, dishonesty, and violence just beneath the surface everywhere you look. Glance inside a few people''s lives, and you soon find loneliness and disappointment, self-hate, and despair. The people in these stories are paralysed: locked into the circles of their everyday lives, where they are caught waiting between life and death. For some, there is a way out - but will circumstances, or their own fear, stop them from taking it?

    2 in stock

    £10.83

  • Finnegans Wake

    Penguin Putnam Inc Finnegans Wake

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisHaving done the longest day in literature with his monumental Ulysses, James Joyce set himself even greater challenges for his next book — the night.A nocturnal state...That is what I want to convey: what goes on in a dream, during a dream. The work, which would exhaust two decades of his life and the odd resources of some sixty languages, culminated in the 1939 publication of Joyce's final and most revolutionary masterpiece, Finnegans Wake.A story with no real beginning or end (it ends in the middle of a sentence and begins in the middle of the same sentence), this book of Doublends Jined is as remarkable for its prose as for its circular structure. Written in a fantantic dream language, forged from polyglot puns and portmanteau words, the Wake features some of Joyce's most brilliant inventive work. Sixty years after its original publication, it remains, in Anthony Burgess's words, a great comic vision, one of the few books of the wor

    10 in stock

    £21.25

  • Ulysses Gabler Edition

    Random House USA Inc Ulysses Gabler Edition

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Gabler edition of Ulysses, the greatest 20th-century novel written in English, contains corrections to more than 5,000 errors in earlier editions.Almost as soon as Ulysses first appeared, in Paris in 1922, James Joyce began to compile a list of errata, and publishers have continued the process ever since, often inadvertently adding to the list. In 1974, an international team of scholars headed by Professor Hans Walter Gabler began to study manuscript evidence, typescripts, and proofs in order to produce as accurate and complete a new edition as possible. First published in 1984, the Gabler edition was hailed as a monumental achievement, one that makes this great and complex novel more accessible and enjoyable than ever before. Also included is a preface by the distinguished Joyce scholar Richard Ellmann, a foreword and note on the text by Gabler, and an afterword by Michael Groden.Set entirely on one day, 16 June 1904, Ulysses follows Leo

    10 in stock

    £20.40

  • Ulises / Ulysses

    Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial Ulises / Ulysses

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £16.96

  • The Originals : A Portrait of The Artist as a

    OM Books International The Originals : A Portrait of The Artist as a

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis"A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man" by James Joyce portrays Stephen Dedalus' journey of self-discovery and rebellion against societal and religious constraints, culminating in his exile from Ireland. Published in 1916, the novel showcases Joyce's modernist style and themes of individuality and cultural identity.

    1 in stock

    £10.66

  • A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    Penguin Publishing Group A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    2 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    2 in stock

    £10.45

  • Lulu.com Ulysses Squashed Edition

    15 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    15 in stock

    £10.66

  • Random House USA Inc Ulysses

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    15 in stock

    £16.20

  • Coyote Canyon Press The Dead

    15 in stock

    15 in stock

    £13.59

  • LEGARE STREET PR A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    15 in stock

    15 in stock

    £25.60

  • LEGARE STREET PR A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

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    15 in stock

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  • LEGARE STREET PR Ulysses. Volume 1

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    15 in stock

    £32.25

  • LEGARE STREET PR Ulysses. Volume 1

    15 in stock

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    15 in stock

    £24.65

  • LEGARE STREET PR Chamber Music

    15 in stock

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    15 in stock

    £13.22

  • LEGARE STREET PR Ulysses. Volume 2

    15 in stock

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    15 in stock

    £24.65

  • LEGARE STREET PR Exiles a Play in Three Acts

    15 in stock

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    15 in stock

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  • Legare Street Press The Lay of Truth a Poem

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    15 in stock

    £22.75

  • Creative Media Partners, LLC A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

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    £13.95

  • Creative Media Partners, LLC A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    15 in stock

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    £23.70

  • Creative Media Partners, LLC Ulysses

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    15 in stock

    £23.70

  • Creative Media Partners, LLC Ulysses

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    15 in stock

    £31.30

  • Creative Media Partners, LLC Dubliners

    15 in stock

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    £13.95

  • Creative Media Partners, LLC Dubliners

    15 in stock

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    £23.70

  • Creative Media Partners, LLC Chamber Music

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    £14.09

  • Creative Media Partners, LLC Exiles

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  • Creative Media Partners, LLC Ulysses

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  • Creative Media Partners, LLC Ulysses

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  • Read Books Finnegans Wake

    15 in stock

    15 in stock

    £25.99

  • Read Books Pomes Penyeach

    15 in stock

    15 in stock

    £13.49

  • Read Books James Joyce Collected Poems

    15 in stock

    15 in stock

    £13.26

  • Read Books James Joyce - Collected Poems

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book contains the collected poetry of James Joyce. It includes ''Chamber Music'', ''Pomes Penyeach'', and ''Ecce Puer''. James Joyce was born in Dublin, Ireland in 1882 and is considered to be one of the most influential writers in the modernist avant-garde of the early 20th century. He published his first short story in 1904 and wrote many poems and novels including A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1914), Ulysses (1922), and Finnegans Wake in 1939. This book is a perfect addition to the bookshelf of those who admire James Joyce and collect his works.

    15 in stock

    £16.99

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