It’s Bloomsday

James Joyce’s most famous works were long, complicated and, depending on who you’re asking, arguably inaccessible novels. But writing to his four-year-old grandson Stephen (yes, that Stephen) in August 1936 he set himself out a simpler task: write a story a kid could enjoy, as “Stevie” was then just four. In it, townspeople outsmart the devil, who has offered them a bridge on the condition that he own the first living soul who crosses it. The first living soul is a cat, urged across by means of a bucket of water.

Of course because it’s Joyce and everyone fights mercilessly about copyright, the entire story isn’t quite available online. But you can have a preview of the thing, as later it was published as a children’s book, here and here.

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One response

  1. “The Injustice Collector”? Jesus H!, litigious lives, the want of controlling image of self and the expressed opinions of others. Mind-blowing.

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