It's early on, but I've been enjoying Roddy Doyle's The Dead Republic, a book I'm not sure I'd have picked up if I hadn't heard him read from it during the PEN World Voices Festival (below). I liked the selection he read from the novel, which imagines Henry Smart (the protagonist of two earlier Doyle novels) collaborating with John Ford on the script of The Quiet Man. A sample:
- Did you hear that? said Ford.
- What?
- I called you a thick son of a bitch.
- So?
- I got it right, he said. - Didn't I? The Irish way for saying dumb.
He smiled.
An interesting read by Roddy Doyle who experienced the mistreatment he described in a school of northern Dublin. The Times called "The Dead Republic" the best of the trilogy, despite the slower pace. Colum McCann's own novel,"Let the Great World Spin," where New York City during the 1970s is seen through the eyes of an Irish immigrant, is another worth reading.
Posted by: Ward | May 23, 2010 at 12:16 PM
thanks for the video, Mark. I will enjoy this.
Posted by: genevieve | May 23, 2010 at 06:38 PM
I loved this book.
Posted by: Edward Renehan | May 27, 2010 at 11:38 AM