The undisputed laureate of ordinary lives
Sunday Times
Mr Doyle has made his own the gritty world of modern Dublin
New York Times
Gloriously triumphant... Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha confirms Doyle as the best novelist of his generation
- Nick Hornby, author of High Fidelity,
Roddy Doyle has done the impossible - he has made Paula Spencer even more unforgettable the second time round
The Times
While recognising that we have all sat po-faced through novels which other people have assured us were hilarious... All I can say is that The Snapper creased me up
- Jonathan Coe, author of What A Carve Up!,
He's a comic genius
Spectator
Roddy Doyle has never lacked ambition, writing complex novels that appear straightforward: heavy on the dialogue, simple in the language, deep in the lives of ordinary working people
The Times
Roddy Doyle's greatest gift has always been for dialogue. He can command the full range of Irish voices and registers... Doyle does not abhor sentimentality. A single sentence, a brief exchange, can raise a laugh and a lump in the throat... The wisdom in Doyle’s writing is the wisdom of this acknowledgement: that to wish to be free of everything that makes one prey to sentimentality and cliché is to wish to be free of what makes fiction possible
Telegraph
Doyle has facility for creating characters out of thin air and making them stick. Not to mention the sly humor, the ability to hew to the fine line between pathos and bathos and write unsentimentally about sad people and situations, and the gift for quicksilver dialogue that can sound like a poetic form of vernacular speech... When you put these together with Doyle’s broad range, you’re left feeling close to dazzled... He imparts a sense of poignancy and glimpses of happiness, of grief and loss and small moments of connection
New York Times
Doyle is justly renowned for his whip-smart dialogue... And there is beauty and compassion in Mr Doyle's sculpted, spare writing. Among all the banter and gags he manages to articulate feelings that are rarely expressed so fittingly
Economist