Craftsmen in writing: Enigma ? in conversation with the birds
"In the wake of two well publicized suicides (Anthony Michael Bourdain, Kate Spade) last week one thing stands out for me: the idea our society has that fame and money mean "having it all." It doesn't matter how much money you have, joy is not out there in money or things, it is within us and between us. #Mentalhealth" (Claire J De Boer@ClaireJDeBoer)
Above got my attention to something beyond "fame and money" - passion to literature scholarship -
Below, self-directed scholar, John Kidd, the greatest James Joyce scholar, couldn't communicate with other human beings. So, he was in conversation with the birds, a way that James Watson discovered the double helix structure of DNA, while observing birds in the field of Cambridge, England, 1953.
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He's a professor at Boston University. He quit. He lingered on campus for a while, haunting Marsh Plaza, and then he disappeared.
John Kidd, ‘talking to the squirrels’ deal. A sad ending.”
In an interview for the release of the book, Mihaies explained: John Kidd “died under sordid circumstances in 2010, buried in debt, detested, insulted, alone, abandoned by everyone, communicating only with pigeons on a Boston campus.”
That sounded like a complete story, except for one thing. I couldn’t find an obituary.
Kidd had been the director of the James Joyce Research Center, a suite of offices on the campus of Boston University dedicated to the study of “Ulysses,” arguably the greatest and definitely the most-obsessed-over novel of the 20th century. Armed with generous endowments and cutting-edge technology, he led a team dedicated to a single goal: producing a perfect edition of the text. I saved the Boston Globe story on my computer and would occasionally open it and just stare. Long ago, I contacted Kidd about working on an article together, because I was fascinated by one of his other projects — he had produced a digital edition, one that used embedded hyperlinks to make the novel’s vast thicket of references and allusions, patterns and connections all available to the reader at a click.
Joyce once said about “Ulysses” — and it’s practically a requirement of any article about the novel to use this quote — “I’ve put in so many enigmas and puzzles that it will keep the professors busy for centuries arguing over what I meant.” And that has always been part of how the novel works. For most of the book, what you are reading are the fractured bits of memory and observation kicking around in the head of a single schlub named Leopold Bloom as he wanders about Dublin on a single day, June 16, 1904. It’s the sensation of putting these bits together and the pleasure, when it happens, of suddenly getting it — the joke, the story, the book — that compels you throughout."
Jack Hitt is the creator and a co-host of the 2018 Peabody Award-winning podcast “Uncivil.” His last feature for the magazine was about the battle over the Sea-Monkey fortune.
A version of this article appears in print on , on Page 26 of the Sunday Magazine (New York Times) with the headline: In Search of the Perfect ‘Ulysses’. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe