The Scotsman

Cheers to pub bores

Stick with Roddy Doyle’s rambling novel about old friends who chew the cud over a few pints of Guinness and you’ll be rewarded with a surprise that changes its mood

- Allan Massie @ alainmas

Roddy Doyle used to write novels that were abrupt, short, buoyant and funny. His new novel Love is rambling, long, heavygoing some of the time, and more likely to make you smile than laugh.

There was a lively sense of expectancy, of a world that might open up, in his early fiction.

Now there’s not much to look forward to, the world has shrunk and the horizon is not far distant.

Another way of putting this is to say that his later fiction, and this new novel Love are true to experience.

This honesty may be bleak; it rings true.

There are moments in Doyle’s novel, Love, which might have you thinking you are listening to Vladimir and Estragon, I guess this is intentiona­l.

However it’s Joe and Dave, not Beckett’s couple, though their conversati­on in a succession of Dublin pubs is almost as circular.

They are old friends from boyhood, now with 60 in sight.

Joe has remained in Dublin, Dave moved to England.

Both are married. Dave returns to see his father, though his relations with him have always been semidetach­ed.

As old friends, over the first pints they hark back to their youth, their first experience of pub life and adult freedom.

They remember with special fondness a pub they knew as “George’s”, the first place where they felt fully accepted as grown- ups. It had a quality all its own and many of us will have had such a pub in our lives.

There was a girl there both fancied, without knowing much about her except that she played the ’ cello and

was called Jessica. They both have something to reveal, though Dave is reluctant to say what this is in his case.

Joe however is eager though he can’t come at it straight. Yet it’s what he wants to talk about; it’s the only thing on his mind.

But he comes to it in a roundabout way, so that it’s not clear whether he was proud and happy or ashamed.

Well, he may be all three. He has met Jessica again, at a parents- teachers evening, and she kissed him on the cheek while his wife, Trish, with whom he has always had good sex

and still, he affirms does, is in another classroom.

They exchange telephone numbers, though Joe, suddenly forgetting her name, puts “George” against the number on the screen.

Dave questions Joe sharply, repeatedly, tiresomely. Has Joe really left Trish? Despite everything? And he goes back, again and again, over his own marriage with Faye.

And this for much of the novel is that.

They go from pub to pub, drinking pint after pint of Guinness as they did when they were young, but with none

of the exuberance of youth, as Dave questions Joe and the reality of his love for Jessica and the guilt he feels about Trish.

There’s a sharp edge to the friendship, a touch of jealousy, as they go on and on and round and round.

Reading the novel is for long periods like being trapped in the company of two pub bores, the experience then not relieved by any wit or imaginativ­e flight, deadened indeed by the monotonous repetition of what seems to be the obligatory Dublin adjective.

And yet and yet, so much rings true, sadly true in their narrow world, and Doyle is so adept a writer that he holds your attention, and this is

There’s a sharp edge to the friendship, a touch of jealousy

rewarded by the surprise he brings off in the last 50 or so pages, a surprise that changes the mood of the novel and invites you to reconsider what has gone before.

There are echoes of Beckett throughout, and you may even find yourself muttering , “Nothing happens, nobody comes, nobody goes, it’s awful.”

Yet, as with Godot, it’s strangely exhilarati­ng, and there are sentences that would surely have had Beckett giving a mournful smile of recognitio­n, even approval. For example: “He lifted both shoulders and extended his arms. Like a halfhearte­d Jesus on a cross built for a smaller man.”

It takes courage for a novelist to demand you pay attention to bores. It takes rare talent to make this, first, acceptable, then weirdly enjoyable.

 ??  ?? Love, by Roddy Doyle, Penguin Jonathan Cape, 336pp, £ 18.99
Love, by Roddy Doyle, Penguin Jonathan Cape, 336pp, £ 18.99
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 ??  ?? Roddy Doyle’s writing makes paying attention to pub bores weirdly enjoyable.
Roddy Doyle’s writing makes paying attention to pub bores weirdly enjoyable.
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