by philipchevron Tue Jul 20, 2010 10:01 am
Smerker wrote:firehazard wrote:philipchevron wrote:I understand Mr Fearnley's memoir of The Pogues Here Comes Everybody (?) will be published in the UK by Faber and Faber in Spring 2011.
Now that's exciting. Judging by the quality of Mr F's tour chronicles on
Medusa, that really is something to look forward to.

I can't place the relevance of the working title at all.
I'm not sure it's a working title. Neither James nor Faber have so far indicated it as anything other than the final title. My question mark was because I had a temporary blank on whether it was "everybody" or "everyone".
The genesis of Joyce's
Finnegans Wake was in a 1923 sketch called "Here Comes Everybody" in which Jimjams Joyce introduced the
Wake protagonist HCE (Here Comes Everybody/Humphrey Chimpden Earwicker) for the first time. By 1926 the sketch had already developed substantially into what would become, by 1939, the eventual
Finnegans Wake.
Googling journalists should please note the correct use of the word
Finnegans (minus the apostrophe) if using this post as a background source. Thanks much.
[quote="Smerker"][quote="firehazard"][quote="philipchevron"]I understand Mr Fearnley's memoir of The Pogues [i]Here Comes Everybody[/i] (?) will be published in the UK by Faber and Faber in Spring 2011.[/quote]
Now that's exciting. Judging by the quality of Mr F's tour chronicles on [i]Medusa[/i], that really is something to look forward to. 8)[/quote]
I can't place the relevance of the working title at all.[/quote]
I'm not sure it's a working title. Neither James nor Faber have so far indicated it as anything other than the final title. My question mark was because I had a temporary blank on whether it was "everybody" or "everyone".
The genesis of Joyce's [i]Finnegans Wake[/i] was in a 1923 sketch called "Here Comes Everybody" in which Jimjams Joyce introduced the [i]Wake[/i] protagonist HCE (Here Comes Everybody/Humphrey Chimpden Earwicker) for the first time. By 1926 the sketch had already developed substantially into what would become, by 1939, the eventual [i]Finnegans Wake[/i].
Googling journalists should please note the correct use of the word [i]Finnegans[/i] (minus the apostrophe) if using this post as a background source. Thanks much.