“Joyce’s Ghosts is extraordinary: original, exceptionally well researched, significant, and beautifully written. Gibbons has succeeded in meshing an attentiveness to history, especially the history of Ireland, with an equally astute awareness of textual details and the formal structures that pattern them. His work is nothing short of brilliant.”
— Vicki Mahaffey, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
“Gibbons is admirably sure-footed in traversing the linguistic byways of Irish modernism. Joyce’s Ghosts conveys the knowledge and insight of a native informant with a lively wit that is sure to appeal to every persuasion and rank of Joyceans.”
— Maria DiBattista, Princeton University
“Iconology, the history of ideas, philological detail—all are called upon to yield unique and unexpected insights in Gibbons’s excellent book. It is truly a mark of Joyce’s inexhaustibility that all kinds of new studies are still reinventing him for us; but the range of Gibbons’s approaches and the wealth of learning made available to us here are surely incomparable and offer us a Joyce both unfamiliar and indispensable.”
— Fredric Jameson, Duke University
“Gibbons has an extraordinary eye for clusters of association, the kind of details which cumulatively imprint themselves on to readers’ unconscious minds. . . . Joyce’s Ghosts is . . . a deeply original work which does not have a quotable, one-line ‘argument’ or ‘claim.’ It is part of a refreshing new wave of literary criticism that is written in clear, hospitable prose, driven by genuine passion, more concerned with illuminating readers than with winning them over.”
— Irish Times
“An engaging, exhaustive study of the supernatural and ordinary intrusions of memory into the awareness of meaning in narrative discourse. . . . Providing an important view of Joyce's modernism, this volume obliges readers, novice and expert, to consider unfamiliar avenues of interpretation. . . . Recommended.”
— Choice