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Roddy Doyle

    8 mai 1958

    Roddy Doyle est un auteur irlandais dont les œuvres plongent dans les profondeurs de l'expérience humaine avec sensibilité et humour. Sa prose, souvent située à Dublin, explore les complexités des relations familiales et les défis sociaux avec une voix originale. Doyle capture magistralement des dialogues authentiques et la vie intérieure de ses personnages, offrant aux lecteurs un aperçu profond de la vie. Sa capacité à mêler la réalité brute à une empathie chaleureuse en fait un conteur mémorable.

    Roddy Doyle
    The Giggler Treatment
    Brian Friel
    The Barrytown trilogy
    The Meanwhile Adventures
    The Rover Adventures
    Rendez-vous au pub
    • Rendez-vous au pub

      • 83pages
      • 3 heures de lecture

      Danny Murphy n'a pas revu son frère Jimmy depuis plus de vingt ans. Danny est resté à Dublin, Jimmy vit à Londres. Sur le chemin du pub, celui-là même où ils ont bu leur première bière alors qu'ils étaient bien loin de l'âge légal, Danny se souvient : les jeux d'enfants, les niches aux voisins, les premières filles... mais aussi les premières disputes, la jalousie, la méfiance, puis la séparation. Leurs retrouvailles vont-elles creuser le fossé qui les sépare, ou les deux frères vont-ils enterrer la hache de guerre et se laisser aller à leur vieille affection ? Ont-ils assez grandi pour se connaître eux-mêmes ?

      Rendez-vous au pub
      3,7
    • The Rover Adventures

      • 432pages
      • 16 heures de lecture

      Includes "The Giggler Treatment," "Rover Saves Christmas," and "The Meanwhile Adventures."

      The Rover Adventures
      4,4
    • The Meanwhile Adventures

      • 169pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      Mr Mack's inventing career has got off to a bad start \- he's been arrested! It's up to Jimmy, Robbie, Kayla and Rover the wonder-dog to: - Rescue Mr Mack from prison - Avoid the orphan catchers - Save the world from an army of stroppy slugs Will they succeed? There's only one way to find out\.

      The Meanwhile Adventures
      4,4
    • The Barrytown trilogy

      • 633pages
      • 23 heures de lecture

      The Barrytown Trilogy' comprises Roddy Doyle's three popular and acclaimed comic novels - 'The Commitments', which also enjoyed widespread success when adapted for cinema, 'The Snapper', and 'The Van.

      The Barrytown trilogy
      4,3
    • The Giggler Treatment

      • 107pages
      • 4 heures de lecture

      Mr Mack's dog Rover sells is own poo to the gigglers - small creatures who take revenge on any adult who treats children unfairly by making the unsuspecting adults step in poo. When the gigglers set out to exact punishment on Mr Mack, Rover knows he doesn't deserve it, and the race is on to get to him before he takes that fatal step.

      The Giggler Treatment
      4,2
    • Ham on Rye

      • 349pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      With his fourth novel, legendary barfly Charles Bukowski follows the path of his alter ego Henry Chinaski through the high school years of acne and rejection, drinking his way through the Depression, and ends at the start of World War Two.

      Ham on Rye
      4,2
    • A Greyhound of a Girl

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      From the author of the adult novels "The Commitments" and "The Snapper" comes a beautifully written coming-of-age tale about four generations of women in one family who set out on an unforgettable journey.

      A Greyhound of a Girl
      4,0
    • The Guts

      • 336pages
      • 12 heures de lecture

      Jimmy Rabbitte is back. The man who invented the Commitments back in the eighties is now forty-seven, with a loving wife, four kids ... and bowel cancer. He isn’t dying, he thinks, but he might be. Jimmy still loves his music, and he still loves to hustle – his new thing is finding old bands and then finding the people who loved them enough to pay money for their resurrected singles and albums. On his path through Dublin he meets two of the Commitments – Outspan, whose own illness is probably terminal, and Imelda Quirk, still as gorgeous as ever. He is reunited with his long-lost brother and learns to play the trumpet… This warm, funny novel is about friendship and family, about facing death and opting for life. It climaxes in one of the great passages in Roddy Doyle’s fiction: four middle-aged men at Ireland’s hottest rock festival watching Jimmy’s son Marvin’s band Moanin’ At Midnight pretending to be Bulgarian and playing a song called ‘I’m Going to Hell’ that apparently hasn’t been heard since 1932… Why? You’ll have to read The Guts to find out. Winner of the Irish Book Awards Novel of the Year

      The Guts
      4,1