The Sisters, By James Joyce (1914)

The Sisters, By James Joyce (1914)

8/10


Although I'm still not completely sure what the author wants to tell us through this story, I was deeply impressed about how Joyce presented the matter of death. 

The death of father Flynn is the main content that penetrates the whole story. However, we are given very limited details about it. Because this story is written in a first-person narrative, we are unable to know what really happened in any timeline. While the story is full of clues and evidences that might mean important things, we are unable to come to any clear conclusions from it.

While we readers are confused about the story, the narrator has his own questions. Questions that will never quite be answered, and be forever stranded in the depths of his mind, slowly eroding into oblivion. This feeling of uncertainty is the whole point of this story.

I believe this is the authors way of telling us that once death occurs, those who are left have nothing but mysteries to deal with. It is a blunt thought, but still something we all should be aware of.

I'm quite satisfied with the mood of this story, so I rated it eight out of ten.

(198 words)


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