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VAN MOVIE TIE-IN
 
 

VAN MOVIE TIE-IN (Paperback)

de Roddy Doyle (Author)
4.2étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (8 évaluations de client)

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Descriptions du produit

From Publishers Weekly

The final novel of a trilogy about the working-class Rabbitte family of Dublin (following The Commitments and The Snapper ), shortlisted for last year's Booker Prize, demonstrates a brash originality and humor that are both uniquely Irish and shrewdly universal. Jimmy Rabbitte Sr. is without a job or a raison d'etre. Then his pal Bimbo gets sacked from his bakery job and the two use Bimbo's unemployment money to buy a ramshackle fish-and-chips van. In hilarious scenes that recall the hot-dog-wagon disaster in John Kennedy Toole's Confederacy of Dunces , Jimmy and Bimbo prove as determined as they are inept at making a go of their business (the vivid descriptions of unhygienically fried chips and grilled sausages could keep readers away from street food for quite a long time). In Jimmy, a likable fellow who tries to do right by his colorful and uncontrollable brood, Doyle has created an authentic hero of modern-day Ireland. That the author, a 33-year-old Dubliner, is also a vastly successful playwright will astonish no one who has read his superb dialogue. Tremendous good fun, devoid of pretension, this novel invites comparison with the best of 20th-century Irish literature. Readers who missed The Snapper first time around can find it in a forthcoming Penguin paperback.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Kirkus Reviews

A beaten-up van dispensing fish and chips, not some clearing in the deep woods, is the setting for Doyle's warm, humorous, and cleareyed look at male friendship--in this his third book featuring the irrepressible Rabbitte family of Dublin (The Commitments, 1989; The Snapper, see above). When Jimmy Rabbitte, Sr., loses his job, he tries to make the best of it, but what he misses most are his evenings in the local pub with his friends (``it wasn't the pints Jimmy, Sr., loved...it was the lads here, the laughing. This was what he loved''). He joins the library, develops a taste for Dickens, and takes care of granddaughter Gina; but when his best friend Bimbo is ``made redundant,'' he's delighted because now, ``only with the two of them, they could do plenty of things.'' And when Bimbo decides to buy a rusting old chipper van, Jimmy accepts his offer to join him in the venture. After much effort, the van is cleaned up, recipes are tested, and the two men are set to sell fish, chips, and burgers to football crowds and pub-goers. Despite any certification from the Health Department, they are a great success, but then the football season ends, business falters, and Jimmy, Sr., misses the fun of the old days--``He'd been starting to think that Bimbo had lost his sense of humor from hanging over the deep-fat fryer too long.'' Meanwhile, Bimbo, egged on by entrepreneurial wife Maggie, becomes bossy and assertive. An encounter with officialdom provokes a crisis in their already fraying friendship, and Bimbo drives the van into the sea; but Jimmy, not so sure the friendship can be restored, returns wet and exhausted to wife Veronica: ``Give us a hug, Veronica, will yeh...I need a hug.'' As usual, Doyle has got it all just right--this is what friendships and families are really like: stubborn, contrary, loving, and, aware of life's absurdities, always ready to be cheered by a good laugh. Vintage Doyle. -- Copyright ©1992, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

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8 évaluations
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4.2étoiles sur 5 (8 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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4.0étoiles sur 5 Today's Chips Today, Nov. 17 2007
Par Craobh Rua "Craobh Rua" (N. Ireland) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Van (Paperback)
Roddy Doyle was born in Dublin in 1958 and saw his first novel, "The Commitments", published in 1987. It was later adapted for the big screen, a version that saw Star Trek's Colm Meaney and a very young Andrea Corr among the cast. "The Van" was first published in 1991 and is the final book in his "Barrytown Trilogy". It was also nominated for that year's Booker Prize.

The book opens in late 1989, and there have been a few changes in the Rabbite house since "The Snapper". Jimmy Jr has now moved out, and is living with his girlfriend Aoife, in Clontarf. (He took his video recorder with him, but still calls round regularly to get his washing done). Leslie, on the other hand, has disappeared - to England, Jimmy Senior suspects - having fairly consistently got himself into trouble. The remainder of the family still live at home - including Sharon and her daughter, Gina. Darren is currently studying for his Leaving Cert and should do well, while the twins are rather sneakily learning how to smoke. Veronica, the mother of the family, is taking a couple of Leaving Cert subjects at night class. Jimmy Senior, on the other hand, has lost his job - and he isn't coping too well with being unemployed.

Jimmy has, more or less, learnt to put the day in - he spends quite a bit of time in the library (he doesn't think much of Alexandre Dumas) and the pitch and putt course (his game has improved dramatically). He has, understandably, had to cut back on his time in the pub...however, he misses the company of his friends more than the beer. With his self-esteem tumbling, there's an occasional flash of anger and he even starts eying up the younger ladies. Jimmy's best friend, Bimbo, then loses his job at the bakery. It's not something Jimmy is exactly happy about - or, at least, so he tells himself - but Bimbo's company brightens up Jimmy's day. However, when Bimbo uses part of his redundancy payment to buy a fish and chip van, Jimmy is brought in as a partner. It could just bring back Jimmy's self respect - though they do say its a mistake to mix business and pleasure.

A very enjoyable, easily read book - and one that generated a touch of nostalgia. The chip van made a fortune for the partnership during the 1990 World Cup - ah, the memories ! - and thirtsomething still on television. While the language is (authentically) 'colourful', it's generally a good-natured book and (despite Jimmy's troubles) there's plenty of humour. Well worth reading.
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1.0étoiles sur 5 Corny, Sep 17 2001
This review is from: The Van (Paperback)
The Van is one of those books disguised as fiction but is actually a potboiler. The characters are unimpressive and the plot is filled with one clichéd situation after another. The third person narrative is unsuccessful because it doesn't have enough emotional impact. The lack of quotation marks makes it a very frustrating read. The prose resembles a screenplay with pages of dialogues interspersed with descriptions. The Irish dialect is tough to understand. I did start to enjoy it during the last few pages, but it wasn't worth to reread the book again. If you're interested in Irish fiction, skip this and read Dubliners by James Joyce.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Funny, Aoû 31 2001
This review is from: The Van (Paperback)
Funny is the only word which keeps appealing to me about this novel it is so, witty and of all the books i have ever read i find this one rather amusing i never thought it would happen with a book but the language and irish humor pop up time and time again to make for superbe reading
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Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 Arguably The Most Humorous
I had seen the screen versions of Roddy Doyle's, "The Commitments" and "The Snapper", prior to reading his written work. Read more
Publié le Mai 11 2001 par taking a rest

4.0étoiles sur 5 Very Good
I greatly enjoyed this book. I have no knowledge of Ireland, so I can't vouch for the accuracy of the culture, but it is a very funny book with a strong emphasis on friendship... Read more
Publié le Mai 21 2000 par docpeppr13

5.0étoiles sur 5 I couldn't stop laughing.........
This is a wonderfully engaging read, I couldn't put it down. The language and the characters were very realistic, in fact they were people I felt I knew from my own childhood... Read more
Publié le Déc 4 1999

5.0étoiles sur 5 Could be the funniest book written in English
Doyle is a master of putting you directly into the rhythm of life in Barrytown. The language is extremely coarse -- it's not a book for your grandma -- but the sentiment and the... Read more
Publié le Juil 28 1998

5.0étoiles sur 5 Irishmen Joyce Never Knew
The Ireland of Jimmy Rabbitte, Sr. and his out-of-work friends from Barrytown,the lower class section of Dublin, is not the Ireland of James Joyce, "Danny Boy," or The... Read more
Publié le Janv. 10 1997

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