I paid 2€ for this secondhand edition of Ulysses. Printed in 1986.
Does it worth?
>PS: I'm really surprised with the printing quality, seems better than a lot of 2015 books.
>1986
probably not, sorry bud
Unlucky, you got the shitty Gabler edition- which was unanimously dropped for its numerous edits and changes to the text.
(hence the low price)
Any copy is. Good luck ever really enjoying another book though.
i like books from the 70s/80s better than new editions usually
>>7510367
Could I be wrong?
>>7510399
Thanks mate.
>>7510370
To be honest, I live in a non-English country, and I don't usually see nice books in english. Which one would be a good edition?
Honestly, unless you're an academic studying Ulysses the edition you pick doesn't really matter. The changes are lots of minor differences that you won't notice.
>>7510445
There's really only three editions, in terms of content:
1922- Original
1961-1984 Standard Edition
1984-1990 Corrected Text Gabler Edition
1990-now Standard Edition (same as before)
The corrected edition was only printed for 6 years and was hugely unpopular, by all means still read it, but you won't be reading Ulysses as Joyce wrote it.
>>7510570
So, if you have to choose between the "Original" and the "Standard", what would you say?
Thanks for the info, /lit/mate.
I just bought the 1922 text, the Shakespeare and Co. version. That's fine, right?
Got that 1961 hardcover one from modern library. Two bucks. Not shabby.
>>7510711
Green cloth binding? I got the same one, but for ~$15. Got it "used" but it's clearly never been read, and I love those cloth modern library texts.