Ulysses is a groundbreaking modernist masterpiece that chronicles a single day—June 16, 1904—in the life of Leopold Bloom, a Jewish advertising agent wandering through the streets of Dublin. As Bloom crosses paths with Stephen Dedalus, a young aspiring writer, their journeys echo the epic structure of Homer’s Odyssey, reimagined in the rhythms of everyday life. Through stream-of-consciousness narration, linguistic experimentation, and vivid urban detail, Joyce transforms the ordinary into the mythic. Dublin itself becomes the central character—its pubs, streets, and voices forming a living tapestry of memory, identity, and longing. Provocative, poetic, and profoundly human, Ulysses invites readers into the intimate thoughts of its characters and the soul of a city. It is a novel that changed literature forever.