This is the final part of the review of "Ulysses" by James Joyce. The review was moved here as Goodreads is removing "creative writing" from September. The first part can be found here and the second part here.
**
Note: Each chapter is rated out of ten for Difficulty, Obscenity, General Mindblowing Brilliance and Beauty of Language.
13. Nausicaa
Difficulty: 2
Obscenity: 8 (details below)
General mindblowing brilliance: 9
Beauty of language: 7
After a discombobulating jump-cut, we find ourselves reading a horribly sentimental magazine story. The description of the girls on the rocks is lush and ridiculous, and Joyce uses this to skewer some chastening points. Gerty McDowell, the most serious of the girls, believes everything she reads, and her thoughts blend in and out of the description. A man is watching them, and Joyce creates an exquisite entwining of various strands. The chapter ends with an extraordinary episode of exhibitionism that fuses sadness and humour.
14. Oxen of the Sun
Difficulty: 10
Obscenity: 0
General mindblowing brilliance: 10
Beauty of language: 1
This chapter is a series of pastiches of prose styles, and the subject matter is similar to that of the Cyclops chapter. However, it is excruciatingly painful to read. Joyce is playing to a select few, and the rest of us are left feeling excluded. I will give a ten-pound note to anyone who can prove they have read the whole chapter without skipping or sighing.
15. Circe
Difficulty: 9
Obscenity: 7
General mindblowing brilliance: 8
Beauty of language: 5
Bloom, Stephen and the medical students go to the red light area of Dublin, Nighttown. This chapter is a 150-page psycho-skelter through everyone's subconscious mind. It is in the form of a surreal play, and everything speaks and turns into everything else. It can be bewildering and tiresome, but there are also many Joycean bursts of humour.
16. Eumaeus
Difficulty: 9
Obscenity: 0
General mindblowing brilliance: 3
Beauty of language: 0
This chapter has a new narrator who is the worst of the lot. The voice is wind-baggy, bumbling, rambling and incoherent. It is like being stuck next to a garrulous bore on a long flight. The chapter is appropriate for the time of day and the state of the characters, but it makes the book longwinded and tiresome.
17. Ithaca
Difficulty: 8
Obscenity: 3 (some quasi-scientific talk of ejaculating semen and Bloom kissing Molly's bottom)
General mindblowing brilliance: 9
Beauty of language: 6
The previous chapter's voice was exhausted, and this chapter's voice is exhaustive. Bloom is filleted, cross-indexed and investigated in every possible way. The technique is "impersonal catechism", but there are many passages that resist this explanation. There are also some insane riffs that make the slog through the chapter suddenly delightful.
18. Penelope
Difficulty: 7 (completely unpunctuated)
Obscenity: 10 (lots of penis talk and other sexual references)
General mindblowing brilliance: 7
Beauty of language: 7
The final chapter is left to Penelope. It is a 70-page unpunctuated flow of thought, feeling, emotion, observation, sex, memory and argument. Molly is described as garrulous, ignorant and annoying, but also never dull. Joyce's presumption that he can speak for a woman on such intimate levels is a huge feat of ventriloquism. I'm not sure if it works or not, but it's a great way to end the day.
And that's it. This has been a long and detailed review of "Ulysses". I hope it has been helpful to those who are thinking of reading the book or who have already read it and want to discuss it further.