RODDY DOYLE


'Roddy Doyle' (, born May 8, 1958 in Dublin) is an Irish novelist, dramatist and screenwriter. Several of his books have been made into successful films, beginning with ''The Commitments'' in 1991. He won the Booker Prize in 1993.
Doyle grew up in Kilbarrack, Dublin. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts from University College, Dublin. He spent several years as an English and geography teacher before becoming a full-time writer in 1993.

Contents
Bibliography
Novels
Short stories
Non-fiction
Theatre
Television screenplay
Screenplays
Children's books
Research work about the author
External links

Bibliography


Novels


★ ''The Barrytown Trilogy'':


★ ''The Commitments'' (1987, film 1991) — A group of Dublin teenagers, led by Jimmy Rabbitte Jr., decide to form a soul band in the tradition of James Brown.


★ ''The Snapper'' (1990, film 1993) — Jimmy's sister, Sharon, becomes pregnant. She is determined to have the child but refuses to reveal the father's identity to her family.


★ ''The Van'' (1991, shortlisted for the 1991 Booker Prize, film 1997) — Jimmy Sr. is laid off, as is his friend Bimbo. Bimbo buys a used fish and chips van and the two go into business for themselves.

★ ''Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha'' (1993, winner of the 1993 Booker Prize) — The world as described, understood and misunderstood by a ten-year-old Dubliner.

★ ''The Woman Who Walked Into Doors'' (1996) — a story of a battered wife, narrated by the victim; despite her husband's increasingly violent behaviour, she defends him, using the classic excuse "I walked into a door" to explain her bruises.

★ ''The Last Roundup'':


★ ''A Star Called Henry'' (1999) — The story of Henry Smart from his childhood till early twenties.


★ ''Oh, Play That Thing!'' (2004) — Henry Smart's adventure into United States.

★ ''Paula Spencer'' (2006) — Ten years after ''The Woman Who Walked into Doors'', its protagonist returns.
Short stories


★ "The Slave" — Terry is middle aged, reads ''Cold Mountain'' and obsesses over a dead rat.

★ "Home to Harlem" A quarter black Irish student researches his paper idea in Harlem and looks for relatives. [McSweeney's] Quarterly Concern #16.

★ "Teaching" — reflections of spent, alcoholic teacher. ''New Yorker,'' April 2, 2007.

★ "Black Hoddie" — three students conduct an experiment on racial profiling by store security. McSweeney's Quarterly Concern #23, May 2007.

★ A collection of short stories, ''The Deportees'', will be published in early 2008.
Non-fiction


★ ''Rory and Ita'' — about Doyle's parents
Theatre


★ ''Brown Bread'' (1987)

★ ''War'' (1989)

★ ''The Woman who Walked into Doors'' (2003)
Television screenplay


★ '' Family'' (1994) — BBC serial which was the forerunner of the 1996 novel ''The Woman Who Walked Into Doors''.
Screenplays


★ ''When Brendan Met Trudy'' (2000) — An amusing, light-hearted tale of romance between a timid schoolteacher (Brendan) and a spunky thief (Trudy).
Children's books


★ ''The Giggler Treatment''

★ ''Rover Saves Christmas''

★ ''The Meanwhile Adventures''

Research work about the author


''An Indecency Decently Put: Roddy Doyle and Contemporary Irish Fiction'', by Niall McArdle (M.A. thesis, 1994, University College, Dublin)
''La réécriture de l'histoire dans les Romans de Roddy Doyle, Dermot Bolger et Patrick McCabe'' by Alain Mouchel-Vallon (PhD thesis, 2005, Reims University, France). [1]

External links



Author page at Irish Writers Online

Roddy Doyle: Author Biography Postcolonial Studies At Emory.

Roddy Doyle's verdict on James Joyce's Ulysses

The Salon Interview: Roddy Doyle

Roddy Doyle At Fantastic Fiction

Reviews of Paula Spencer (2006)

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