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161 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2001
* He was an Irish.And those are enough for me to think that his works, even if expensive, are worth reading.
* Like Nabokov, he was a multi-lingual writer: English, French and Italian. He did not write any of his works in Italian though. Nobokov wrote in Russian, English and French.
* He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1969 ”for his writing, which – in new forms for the novel and drama – in the destruction of modern man acquires it elevation.” I am still to read his works but in the book, I did not see anything political about him. In fact, his works offers a bleak, tragicomic outlook on human nature, often coupled with black comedy and gallows humour. Question in my mind: was he an exception to the rule?
* He was a friend of and was strongly influenced by James Joyce (1882-1941) and helped him write Finnegan’s Wake.Both of them are considered as modernists. Their friendship turned sour when Beckett rejected the advances of Joyce’s daughter Lucia owing to her progressing schizophrenia. Funny, because later, he was stabbed by a prostitute who thought that he was a pimp in a dark street.
* He was born on a Good Friday. His father was a surveyor while his mother was a nurse. They lived in a house called Cooldrinagh that is huge and with a garden.
* He attended a school that Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) also attended. He was a very athletic boy/young man.
* His novels that I have to read in my quest to finish all the 1001 books: (2006-2010): Murphy (1938), Molloy (1951), and Malone Dies (1951). There were also those in the original 2006 version: Watt (1945), Mercier et Comier (1946) , The Unnamable (1953), How It Is (1961) and Worstward Ho (1961). Only his first novel Dream of Fair to Middling Women (1932) did not make it to the 1001 list.