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James Joyce's Dubliners Audible Audiobook – Abridged

4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 3,971 ratings

TV actor Charles Keating provides superb narratives of "Araby", "Eveline", and "Counterparts" from Joyce's brilliant collection of stories, rich with memorable characters and displaying his genius for the subtleties and nuances of language.

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Product details

Listening Length 54 minutes
Author James Joyce
Narrator Charles Keating
Audible.com Release Date December 18, 2013
Publisher Dover Publications
Program Type Audiobook
Version Abridged
Language English
ASIN B00HEX58D0
Best Sellers Rank #499,452 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals)
#4,838 in Fiction Short Stories
#15,172 in Classic Literature
#17,996 in Literary Fiction (Audible Books & Originals)

Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
3,971 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the stories lovely, finely crafted, and exceptional. They also appreciate the insights, saying they're useful and vibrant. Readers say the book is worth purchasing, with fleshed-out characters and diverse subjects. However, some find the stories boring, inconsequential, and too short. Opinions are mixed on the writing quality, with some finding it excellent and easy to read and understand, while others say the matter is dull and the prose is poor.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

67 customers mention "Story quality"62 positive5 negative

Customers find the stories lovely, finely crafted, and exceptional. They say the chapters present fascinating, authentic characters. Readers also mention the book exemplifies all the great qualities that one never finds in feminist writing.

"...These are stories like beautifully prepared simple meals. Every bite, every word, delicious. Of course, simple meals aren’t always so simple...." Read more

"Handsomely produced, elegantly assembled, and consistently engrossing: these actors read the stories with appropriate sensitivity, wit, pathos, and..." Read more

"...at about 30 pages, it is by far the most powerful and memorable of the stories...." Read more

"The stories are still worth reading ( imho). Some consider “The Dead” to be the greatest short story in the English language...." Read more

22 customers mention "Insight"22 positive0 negative

Customers find the insights in the book keen and inviting. They say the introduction is extremely useful and the storyline is great. Readers mention the book is full of vibrant reality and makes them think. They also say it's one of his more accessible works, covering one aspect of life.

"...have been pleased at this version of his pioneering, eloquent, yet accessible and moving, accounts of his imagined neighbors and municipal..." Read more

"...My professor was pretty out there, but incredibly smart, and provided insightful information on each chapter from Dubliners...." Read more

"...quite short – almost flash fiction by today’s standards – some resonate with poignancy, whereas others feel vague and underdeveloped...." Read more

"...Great writing, fluent and evocative, doesn't feel 100 years old!..." Read more

10 customers mention "Value for money"10 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the value for money of the book. They mention it's a good purchase and worth the price.

"...I found this copy online and took advantage of the extremely low price...." Read more

"...The book was in very good condition and you can't beat the price. Received it in record time." Read more

"...So overall great this is a great book and great price as well." Read more

"...Not only was the book great (as I expected), but the price was fantastic...." Read more

8 customers mention "Character development"8 positive0 negative

Customers find the characters fleshed-out and interesting. They say it's easy to feel empathy with some characters. Readers also mention the stories are diverse in character and subject.

"...assembled, and consistently engrossing: these actors read the stories with appropriate sensitivity, wit, pathos, and distance...." Read more

"...I found the book well-written, and the characters were fleshed out and interesting...." Read more

"The chapters present fascinating, authentic characters. However, the period setting requires research from the modern reader...." Read more

"...But I was entranced instead. What a weaver of tales! What characters. What prose! Don't hesitate to jump into Joyce's wonderful world...." Read more

7 customers mention "Irish content"7 positive0 negative

Customers find the Irish content in the book real, poetic, and delightful. They also say it's beautiful and pure.

"...Reason? Readable is number one, two, and three. But Dubliners is delightful." Read more

"...The last chapter is particularly beautiful and pure Irish." Read more

"It gives vivid description of life in Dublin and this represents life in a any big city." Read more

"If you like the sad, poetic Irish, you will like this book." Read more

66 customers mention "Writing quality"41 positive25 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the writing quality of the book. Some mention it's excellent, fluent, and evocative. Others say the matter is dull, the prose is vague, and self-indulgent. They also mention the typesetting and binding leave much to be desired.

"...These are stories like beautifully prepared simple meals. Every bite, every word, delicious. Of course, simple meals aren’t always so simple...." Read more

"...I would also say that the publisher chose a font that is very small, making it difficult to read. There are better choices out there." Read more

"...I think JJ might have been pleased at this version of his pioneering, eloquent, yet accessible and moving, accounts of his imagined neighbors and..." Read more

"...arrived in good shape as far as the cover and the pages, and it was printed well...." Read more

14 customers mention "Boredom"0 positive14 negative

Customers find the book boring, a waste of time, and useless. They say the stories are inconsequential and vague. Readers also mention the book doesn't satisfy their expectations and is underdeveloped.

"...paint a tapestry, albeit in beautiful prose, but fall short of actually engaging the reader. In truth, there are no "stories" as much as vignettes...." Read more

"...– some resonate with poignancy, whereas others feel vague and underdeveloped...." Read more

"...I thought the subject matter was dull and the prose were vague and self-indulgent...." Read more

"...none of us have read the book because, frankly, it's just pitifully wretchedly dreadful."..." Read more

9 customers mention "Short stories"0 positive9 negative

Customers find the short stories in the book too short to capture their interest. They also say the writing is good, but the stories are uninteresting and inconsequential.

"...Bottom line: This is a very short book containing very short stories, most of which are TOO short for my taste...." Read more

"...Some pieces are quite short – almost flash fiction by today’s standards – some resonate with poignancy, whereas others feel vague and underdeveloped...." Read more

"...Unfortunately I found the short stories themselves to be just OK, and so I'm left a bit puzzled as to why Joyce is seen as the end all be all...." Read more

"I don't know how I got through this. It was boring; not one story was memorable - just mundane conversations beginning nowhere and ending nowhere...." Read more

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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on August 21, 2018
Just finished The Dubliners by James Joyce. I hadn’t read any of his works. This is a good start for anyone thinking of reading real literature. It’s astonishing to think he was 22 years old when he’d completed these stories. But I guess true genius shows up early. I see why he is so revered. I would like to learn the art of short story writing and Joyce is the master.

This book is a series of vignettes, snapshots or sketches. Just the ticket for those who want a brief read before turning out the light, perhaps. But all the stories have a streak of sadness and harsh reality of those years before World War I, so your dreams may not be so sweet. There are fifteen stories but I will refer to just three.

I loved THE BOARDING HOUSE. This covers the life of the boarding house owner, Mrs. Mooney and her daughter Polly. Polly starts a dalliance with one of the boarders—thirty-five-year-old, Mr. Doran—a man with a fairly good job—a decent catch. Madam will deal with matters of emotion ‘like a cleaver to meat’, as Joyce delicately puts it, especially where her daughter’s honor is at stake. No man would be allowed to abuse her hospitality and get away with it under her own roof. Like Polly, now sullied, Mr. Doran stands to lose everything.

ARABY is one of my favorites and tells the story of a boy who falls for the girl across the street, the sister of a friend. He is obsessed with her and she fills his thoughts for every moment, at school, at home. He sits by the parlor window staring at her door across the street. Love is painful. This story is relevant to all of us at that age as boys and girls who become smitten. Puppy love. Eventually the girl speaks to him under the lamp light. He notices every detail about her. Joyce describes the light on her body and her petticoat. She tells him she would love to go the Araby market on Saturday, but she has to go to a church meeting. Thrilled, the boy tells her he is going and will bring her something back. He now has a mission and a reason to get closer to her. He counts the hours until he can go after getting permission from his aunt and promise of money from his uncle. Frustratingly, his uncle comes home late that Saturday evening and has forgotten about his promise. His aunt persuades him to give him the money and let him go. Joyce describes the lonely train journey to the bazaar. He’s been given a florin (two shillings—about twenty-five cents in today’s money) and spends most of it on the train fare and a shilling to get in. Once inside, most of the stalls are now closed. Deflated, he stares at a stall with jars and things and the girl who he’d heard talking with two men asks him if he wants to buy something. He tells her ‘no’. Most of his money is gone now. He notices the accents of the girl and two men are English. Why? It just is. And it makes it all the more real. He storms out feeling angry with himself for what he realizes is a fool’s errand, for his stupidity and pride—one of those coming-of-age moments in a young man’s life.

Joyce makes the complex look simple. He does not explain anything and leaves somethings as a mystery. Why does he mention that they live in a house where a priest had died? Why does the boy live with his uncle and aunt? Where are his mother and father? We must presume they are dead. That is how things are in the boy’s life. And that’s how the best writing is. Things left unexplained.

These are stories like beautifully prepared simple meals. Every bite, every word, delicious. Of course, simple meals aren’t always so simple. Often preparation is complex, resulting in exquisite, memorable taste.

THE DEAD is reckoned to be one of Joyce’s masterpieces and John Huston filmed it beautifully and showed his own genius. The main character, Gabriel, takes his wife to a Christmas celebration at the house of his two aunts with many in attendance. Later that night, he takes his wife home by carriage in the snow and all the while he is feels his love for her, as he’d done all evening, and looks forward to making love to her at their hotel room. Once there, and after chatting with her, he realizes she is distraught. He learns of a previous love she had had for a boy she’d known when she was young and who had died, or willed himself to die when she left to live in another town. Gabriel’s own sadness and crushed spirit are evident as, with tears in his eyes, he looks out into the gently falling snow that must be falling on his wife’s sweetheart’s grave and across all of Ireland. The last paragraphs are said to be some of the greatest writing in English literature. John Huston’s excellent film maybe viewed on Youtube.

On looking back over The Dubliners, I have to ask myself: are these stories and Joyce’s writing so impactful that they could change how you think? Yes, I think so. I’ll read them again and again. The more one delves, the more one sees. It’s not really so much about the dreary lives of people Joyce writes about, but about the writing itself that conjures up emotional experience.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 6, 2024
I love Irish literature and James Joyce is the classic example. I read this because I'm working up to his Ulysses, which I've only experienced as an audiobook. It really helps to know some Irish history when you're reading Joyce, if you don't, you will miss some things. I'd recommend Dubliners to anyone who enjoys short stories, especially if you like darker stories like William Faulkner's. I enjoyed it.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 25, 2017
Much has been said about his work, which is one of the problems with Joyce.  We all know of him, but how many of us have read him?  I read A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man many years ago, and remember almost nothing of it.  And like many others before me I tried to tackle Ulysses and got about ten pages in and said, "Bugger this!" (Imagine me saying it in my poor approximation of an Irish accent, and you'll get the idea.)  But it occurred to me that hearing the words spoken might be exactly the way I should approach Joyce this time, and if it worked, if I found myself enjoying one of the more accessible books, then perhaps the audio book of Ulysses or Finnegan's Wake would go on my list.

In the end I discovered that I liked Joyce.  I'm not a huge fan, but I like the sound of his words, particularly when read by Irish actors.  And in the Caedmon version, the quality of the narration is up and down, with possibly the best reading being done by Stephen Rea, who gives us a version of The Dead that sounds as if it comes from the depths of a weary soul.  Props also to Ciaran Hinds, Colm Meany, and Dan O'Herlihy.  Alas the one Irish actor I'd have loved to hear narrate one of these stories was not included.  Donal McCann, who left us far too soon, would have done an outstanding job, but it was not to be.

As for the stories themselves, I began to see that they were all about who people think they are and why.  They're brief glances into events, even moments of the characters' lives that are so telling, that make their identities so clear that you come away from each one understanding what they hope for, and why they are suffering.

One story in particular -- I don't recall the title at the moment, so apologies for being vague here -- is the best sketch of an alcoholic I have ever read.  I listened, becoming increasingly impatient with him until I wanted to shove him down the stairs.  And then I recognized the knowledge that he was fleeing from, and felt terribly sad.  It didn't excuse him, but it did explain him.

I'm not sure if I will go any further with Joyce, even in audio form, but I did enjoy Dubliners tremendously, and that's all you can ask from a book.
48 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 2, 2024
I'm not sure what I expected, but this wasn't it. The people of Ireland at a sad and bleak time in history. Making their way through each day.
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Top reviews from other countries

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Matasub
5.0 out of 5 stars Buon prodotto
Reviewed in Italy on August 28, 2024
qualità della carta buona, riproporrei alla scuola
Amazon Customer
1.0 out of 5 stars Arrived damaged
Reviewed in the Netherlands on June 6, 2024
Book came covered in something sticky that can not be removed with water or degreaser
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Amazon Customer
1.0 out of 5 stars Arrived damaged
Reviewed in the Netherlands on June 6, 2024
Book came covered in something sticky that can not be removed with water or degreaser
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Laura
5.0 out of 5 stars Libro perfecto para B2 EOI
Reviewed in Spain on November 26, 2023
Libro con actividades en cada capítulo.
ecnrb
5.0 out of 5 stars Dubliners
Reviewed in Brazil on November 25, 2019
James Joyce para ser apreciado. Detalhe para o conto "The Dead", mote para último grande filme de Jonh Huston, com sua filha Anjelica, em 1987.
N S
5.0 out of 5 stars A classic
Reviewed in Canada on May 11, 2019
Used this for an English class.