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Love

A Novel

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On sale Jun 22, 2021 | 336 Pages | 978-1-9848-8047-5
Two old friends reconnect in Dublin for a dramatic, revealing evening of drinking and storytelling in this winning new novel from the author of the Booker Prize winning Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha

One summer's evening, two men meet up in a Dublin restaurant.

Drinking pals back in their youth, now married and with grown up children, their lives have taken seemingly similar paths. But Joe has a secret he needs to tell Davy, and Davy has a sorrow he wants to keep from Joe. Both are not the men they used to be.

Joe has left his wife and family for another woman, Jessica. Davy knows her too, or should - she was the girl of their dreams four decades earlier, the girl with the cello in George's pub. As Joe's story unfolds across Dublin - pint after pint, pub after pub - so too do the memories of what eventually drove Davy from Ireland: his first encounter with Faye, the lively woman who would become his wife; his father's somber disapproval; the pained spaces left behind when a parent dies.

As the two friends try to reconcile their versions of the past over the course of one night, Love offers a delightfully comic yet moving portrait of the many forms love can take throughout our lives.
Praise for Love:

“[Love] isn’t so much about what happens, or happened once upon a time, as it is about the mystically inaccurate nature of language . . . Doyle puts feeling first in this novel by putting it last, in the final pages . . . in the end, you see that the sacred world of the two friends was lurking in all that preceded this final scene, and concealing itself so successfully that they themselves did not realize how much they cared for each other.” The New York Times Book Review

“This story, with its beer-inspired and home-brewed philosophy, its funny and painful moments, is about love . . . and the remembrance of love between friends, lovers, and family . . . Doyle’s narrative style is fast-paced and deceptively easy to read . . . [dialogue] goes down as smoothly as gulps of beer. . . [a] brilliant two-character story.” The Boston Globe

"Doyle is justly renowned for his whip-smart dialogue, which combines salty humor and the loving use of local vernacular . . . there is beauty and compassion in [his] sculpted, spare writing . . . Love is a reminder that its author is one to treasure.” The Economist

“Doyle, the author of tales that feature crackling wit and dialogue […] knows what he’s doing . . . [A] subtle, observant novel.” The Minneapolis Star Tribune
 

“[A] funny, poignant, profane, unpredictable conversation about friendship, marriage, parenthood, aging, Dublin pubs and the eternal mystery of the title.” Tampa Bay Times
 
“Here is a paean to all things Irish. Fans of [Doyle] will be glad to follow old mates Davy and Joe through a pub crawl that is both elegiac and hilarious.” The Washington Post

Love marks a new turn for Doyle. It is a tender and deceptively complex book that touches not just on matters of the heart, but on memory, friendship, masculinity, fatherhood, home and the difficulty of true communication… Doyle, as he did in Smile, pulls off a final act that is profound and elegiac.” Times Literary Supplement (London)

“Deeply moving… [with] a beautifully handled and powerful reveal.” Guardian 
“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… [Love] is devastating.”  The Times (London)

“A praise-song to the Irish pub . . . the reader is dropped into the familiar, perfect rhythm of Roddy Doyle’s effortless dialogue . . . Laced into the good humour and camaraderie is an examination of mid-to-late life, as both men measure themselves against their younger selves and against each other.”Financial Times

“The words said and not said build up their own weirdly propulsive inarticulacy yet, just when you wonder if it’s all a bit of a boozy journey through the emotional deep freeze of male friendship, Doyle brings it to a masterly conclusion . . . A first-rate novel about the different bonds between men and the ineffable mysteries of love.” Daily Mail

“This witty, satisfying novel about male friendship, aging, and guilt from Doyle dramatizes language’s inadequacies when it comes to affairs of the heart . . . [T]he two men are nothing if not good company. By closing time, Doyle has focused the novel’s rambling energy into an elegiac and sobering climax. This one is a winner.” Publishers Weekly

“[A] freewheeling tale of longtime mates Joe and Davy . . . As the two track back through the years of their marriages, a mixture of regret and melancholy permeates what's both spoken and left unspoken. And, yet, at the end of this long night's journey into day, we are buoyed against the sadness by what is finally a portrait of love in the face of life.” Booklist

Love is altogether spellbinding . . . [Doyle] is as a wizard at dialogue once again here in capturing every ricochet of deceit, evasion, and hilariously hidden meaning in the course of the night’s talking. The whole book is audacious, richly layered and often comic, but ultimately deeply moving. . . . It is quite beautiful, and not an ounce overworked. Move over Socrates and watch an Irish master of dialogue at work.” Irish Examiner
© Anthony Woods
RODDY DOYLE was born in Dublin in 1958. He is the author of ten acclaimed novels, including The Commitments, The Van (a finalist for the Booker Prize), Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha (winner of the Booker Prize), The Woman Who Walked Into Doors, A Star Called Henry, The Guts and most recently, Love. Doyle has also written several collections of stories, as well as Two Pints, Two More Pints and Two for the Road, and several works for children and young adults including the Rover novels. He lives in Dublin. View titles by Roddy Doyle
He knew it was her, he told me.  He told me this a year after he saw her.  Exactly a year, he said. 

-Exactly a year?

-That’s what I said, Davy.  A year ago – yesterday.

-You remember the date?

-I do, yeah.

-Jesus, Joe.

He saw her at the end of a corridor and he knew.  Immediately.  She was exactly the same.  Even from that far off.  Even though she was only a shape, a dark, slim shape – a silhouette – in the centre of the late afternoon light that filled the glass door behind her.

-She was never slim, I said.

He shrugged.

-I don’t even know what slim means, really, he said.

He smiled.

-Same here, I said. 

-I just said it, he said. –The word.  She was a tall shape – instead.

-Okay.

-Not a roundy shape.

-She’s aged well, I said. –That what you’re telling me.

-I am, he said. –And she has.

-Where was the corridor? I asked him.

-The school, he said.

-What school?

-The school, he said again.

-We didn’t know her in school, I said.

I knew he didn’t mean the school we’d both gone to.  We’d known each other that long.  I’d said it – that we hadn’t known her in school – to try to get him to be himself.  To give back an answer that would get us laughing.  He was the funny one.

-My kids’ school, he said.

-Hang on, I said. –It was a parent-teacher meeting?

-The woman of your dreams stepped out of the sun and into a parent-teacher meeting?

-Yep.

-Thirty years after the last time you saw her, I said. –More, actually.  Way more.  Thirty-six or seven years.

-Yeah, he said. –That’s it, more or less.  What did you say there?  That she stepped out of the sun. 

-I think so, yeah.

-Well, that’s it, he said  -That’s what happened.  She did. 

I didn’t live in Ireland.  I went over to Dublin three or four times a year, to see my father.  I used to bring my family but in more recent years I’d travelled alone.  The kids were grown up and gone and my wife, Faye, didn’t like flying, and she wasn’t keen on the drive to Holyhead and the ferry. 

-Your dad never liked me, so he didn’t. 

-He did.

-He did not, she said. -He thought I was a slut.  He said it, sure.

-He didn’t say that.

-More or less, he did.  You told me that, yourself, remember.  I’m not making it up.  He never liked me, so I won’t be going around pretending I like him.  I hate that house.  It’s miserable. 

-She kissed me, Joe said now.

-In the school?

The man I knew – I thought I knew; I used to know – would have answered, ‘No, in the arse,’ or something like that.

-Yes, he said. –She remembered me. 

I didn’t know Joe well. 

I used to. 

We left school for good on the same day.  He got work; I went to college, to UCD.  He had money, wages – a salary.  I had none until after I’d graduated.  But we kept in touch.  We both lived at home, a ten-minute walk from each other.  We listened to records in my house about once a week, in the front room.  He bought most of the records; mine was the house where we could blast them out.  We played them so loud we could put our hands on the window glass and feel the song we were hearing.  My mother was dead and my father didn’t seem to mind.  He told me years later he just wanted to see me happy.  He endured the noise – the Pistols, Ian Dury, the Clash, Elvis Costello – because he thought it made me happy.  I’d have been happy if he’d hammered at the wall with a shoe or his fist and told me to turn it fuckin’ down.  I’d have been happy if I’d felt I had to fight him. 

We went drinking, myself and Joe, when I had the money.  At Christmas and in October, when I came back from working in West Germany and London, before I had to spend the money I’d earned on books and bus fares.  We’d get quickly drunk and roar. I rushed straight into anger.  I thumped things, and myself.  I let myself go, glimpsed the man I could become.  I pulled back, and copied Joe.  He drank, I drank.  He laughed, I laughed.  I roared when he roared.

-She remembered you?

-Yeah, he said. –She did.  Immediately.  Like I said. 

I looked at him again.  I could see why she’d have recognised him.  The boy – the young man – was still there.  His head was the same shape.  He’d worn glasses back then and he still did – or, he did again – the same kind of black-framed glasses.  He still had his hair.  It was grey now, most of it, but it had never been very dark.  He’d put on weight but not much, and none of it around his face and neck. 

-Where were you? I asked him.

-In the school, he said. –I told you.

-Where, though?

-Outside the maths room, he said. –Waiting.

-For your turn with the teacher.

-Yeah, he said. –There were four or five people – mostly mothers – ahead of me.  And I’d no one else to see – I’d seen all the others.  We divided the list.

-Hang on, I said. –Trish was there as well?

Trish was his wife.

-Yeah, he said. –She was somewhere else.  Queueing up for another teacher. 

-You kissed the love of your life while Trish was in the building?

-Big building, he said. –It’s a fuckin’ school – in fairness.

That was more like the man I thought I knew.  The man I’d  wanted to be.

-You kissed her, I said.

-She kissed me.

-Where was Trish, exactly?

-Exactly, Davy?  Exactly?  Is this a murder investigation? 

-Okay.

-For fuck sake, Davy.

-Okay – sorry.  Go on. 

-The home economics room, he said. –Or wordwork.   Somewhere else.  We took four teachers each, to get it over with as quickly as possible.  Even at that, it took all afternoon.  It’s the only chance the teachers get to talk to adults.  So, they fuckin’ grab it.  I was lucky.

-How come?

-I got to meet the maths teacher, he said. –A gobshite, by the way.  But I was outside his door.  I just happened to be there.
           
-And she walked in while you were waiting.
           
-Right place, right time.  Yeah.  Like I said – I was lucky. 
           
-One of your kids does home economics and woodwork?
           
-What?
           
-You said home economics or woodwork.  Trish was in one of those rooms. 
           
-You’re being Columbo again, Davy.
           
-Lay off. 
           
-I just meant – like, for example.  The rooms.  Trish was somewhere else, in one of the other rooms, you know.  Way off somewhere in the building.
           
-Which kid was it?
           
I’d never met his children and I didn’t know their names.  We told each other about the kids, brought each other up to date whenever we met, and then forgot about them.  I hadn’t seen Trish in twenty years. 
           
-Holly, he said.
           
-You sure?
           
-Yeah, he said. –Of course, I am.  Fuck off.
           
-Okay.
           
-You’re being a bit of a prick, Davy.
           
-I’m not.
           
-You are.
           
-It’s a bit of a shock.
           
-Why does it even matter?
           
-Okay.
           
-To you.
           
-I know.
           
I’d never seen him with his children but I knew he was a good father.  And I knew what that meant.  He was reliable.  He’d given them their routines.  He’d come home at much the same time every evening.  He’d picked them up from football or gymnastics and he’d always been there on time.  They’d seen him filling the dishwasher and the washing machine.  They’d seen him cooking at the weekends; they’d probably preferred his cooking to Trish’s.  He’d served them Fanta in wine glasses on Saturday nights.  He’d told them he loved them, twice a day, start and end.  He’d read to them – the same book, again and again - gone swimming with them, slept on a chair beside them when they’d been kept overnight in Temple Street Children’s Hospital.  He’d read about asthma, eczema, OCD, intersexuality.  He wasn’t a man who didn’t know what subjects his kids had done in school.  He would never have pretended that he was that man. 
           
He was right.  It shouldn’t have mattered.  I shouldn’t have cared.  But it did.  And I did.

About

Two old friends reconnect in Dublin for a dramatic, revealing evening of drinking and storytelling in this winning new novel from the author of the Booker Prize winning Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha

One summer's evening, two men meet up in a Dublin restaurant.

Drinking pals back in their youth, now married and with grown up children, their lives have taken seemingly similar paths. But Joe has a secret he needs to tell Davy, and Davy has a sorrow he wants to keep from Joe. Both are not the men they used to be.

Joe has left his wife and family for another woman, Jessica. Davy knows her too, or should - she was the girl of their dreams four decades earlier, the girl with the cello in George's pub. As Joe's story unfolds across Dublin - pint after pint, pub after pub - so too do the memories of what eventually drove Davy from Ireland: his first encounter with Faye, the lively woman who would become his wife; his father's somber disapproval; the pained spaces left behind when a parent dies.

As the two friends try to reconcile their versions of the past over the course of one night, Love offers a delightfully comic yet moving portrait of the many forms love can take throughout our lives.

Praise

Praise for Love:

“[Love] isn’t so much about what happens, or happened once upon a time, as it is about the mystically inaccurate nature of language . . . Doyle puts feeling first in this novel by putting it last, in the final pages . . . in the end, you see that the sacred world of the two friends was lurking in all that preceded this final scene, and concealing itself so successfully that they themselves did not realize how much they cared for each other.” The New York Times Book Review

“This story, with its beer-inspired and home-brewed philosophy, its funny and painful moments, is about love . . . and the remembrance of love between friends, lovers, and family . . . Doyle’s narrative style is fast-paced and deceptively easy to read . . . [dialogue] goes down as smoothly as gulps of beer. . . [a] brilliant two-character story.” The Boston Globe

"Doyle is justly renowned for his whip-smart dialogue, which combines salty humor and the loving use of local vernacular . . . there is beauty and compassion in [his] sculpted, spare writing . . . Love is a reminder that its author is one to treasure.” The Economist

“Doyle, the author of tales that feature crackling wit and dialogue […] knows what he’s doing . . . [A] subtle, observant novel.” The Minneapolis Star Tribune
 

“[A] funny, poignant, profane, unpredictable conversation about friendship, marriage, parenthood, aging, Dublin pubs and the eternal mystery of the title.” Tampa Bay Times
 
“Here is a paean to all things Irish. Fans of [Doyle] will be glad to follow old mates Davy and Joe through a pub crawl that is both elegiac and hilarious.” The Washington Post

Love marks a new turn for Doyle. It is a tender and deceptively complex book that touches not just on matters of the heart, but on memory, friendship, masculinity, fatherhood, home and the difficulty of true communication… Doyle, as he did in Smile, pulls off a final act that is profound and elegiac.” Times Literary Supplement (London)

“Deeply moving… [with] a beautifully handled and powerful reveal.” Guardian 
“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… [Love] is devastating.”  The Times (London)

“A praise-song to the Irish pub . . . the reader is dropped into the familiar, perfect rhythm of Roddy Doyle’s effortless dialogue . . . Laced into the good humour and camaraderie is an examination of mid-to-late life, as both men measure themselves against their younger selves and against each other.”Financial Times

“The words said and not said build up their own weirdly propulsive inarticulacy yet, just when you wonder if it’s all a bit of a boozy journey through the emotional deep freeze of male friendship, Doyle brings it to a masterly conclusion . . . A first-rate novel about the different bonds between men and the ineffable mysteries of love.” Daily Mail

“This witty, satisfying novel about male friendship, aging, and guilt from Doyle dramatizes language’s inadequacies when it comes to affairs of the heart . . . [T]he two men are nothing if not good company. By closing time, Doyle has focused the novel’s rambling energy into an elegiac and sobering climax. This one is a winner.” Publishers Weekly

“[A] freewheeling tale of longtime mates Joe and Davy . . . As the two track back through the years of their marriages, a mixture of regret and melancholy permeates what's both spoken and left unspoken. And, yet, at the end of this long night's journey into day, we are buoyed against the sadness by what is finally a portrait of love in the face of life.” Booklist

Love is altogether spellbinding . . . [Doyle] is as a wizard at dialogue once again here in capturing every ricochet of deceit, evasion, and hilariously hidden meaning in the course of the night’s talking. The whole book is audacious, richly layered and often comic, but ultimately deeply moving. . . . It is quite beautiful, and not an ounce overworked. Move over Socrates and watch an Irish master of dialogue at work.” Irish Examiner

Author

© Anthony Woods
RODDY DOYLE was born in Dublin in 1958. He is the author of ten acclaimed novels, including The Commitments, The Van (a finalist for the Booker Prize), Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha (winner of the Booker Prize), The Woman Who Walked Into Doors, A Star Called Henry, The Guts and most recently, Love. Doyle has also written several collections of stories, as well as Two Pints, Two More Pints and Two for the Road, and several works for children and young adults including the Rover novels. He lives in Dublin. View titles by Roddy Doyle

Excerpt

He knew it was her, he told me.  He told me this a year after he saw her.  Exactly a year, he said. 

-Exactly a year?

-That’s what I said, Davy.  A year ago – yesterday.

-You remember the date?

-I do, yeah.

-Jesus, Joe.

He saw her at the end of a corridor and he knew.  Immediately.  She was exactly the same.  Even from that far off.  Even though she was only a shape, a dark, slim shape – a silhouette – in the centre of the late afternoon light that filled the glass door behind her.

-She was never slim, I said.

He shrugged.

-I don’t even know what slim means, really, he said.

He smiled.

-Same here, I said. 

-I just said it, he said. –The word.  She was a tall shape – instead.

-Okay.

-Not a roundy shape.

-She’s aged well, I said. –That what you’re telling me.

-I am, he said. –And she has.

-Where was the corridor? I asked him.

-The school, he said.

-What school?

-The school, he said again.

-We didn’t know her in school, I said.

I knew he didn’t mean the school we’d both gone to.  We’d known each other that long.  I’d said it – that we hadn’t known her in school – to try to get him to be himself.  To give back an answer that would get us laughing.  He was the funny one.

-My kids’ school, he said.

-Hang on, I said. –It was a parent-teacher meeting?

-The woman of your dreams stepped out of the sun and into a parent-teacher meeting?

-Yep.

-Thirty years after the last time you saw her, I said. –More, actually.  Way more.  Thirty-six or seven years.

-Yeah, he said. –That’s it, more or less.  What did you say there?  That she stepped out of the sun. 

-I think so, yeah.

-Well, that’s it, he said  -That’s what happened.  She did. 

I didn’t live in Ireland.  I went over to Dublin three or four times a year, to see my father.  I used to bring my family but in more recent years I’d travelled alone.  The kids were grown up and gone and my wife, Faye, didn’t like flying, and she wasn’t keen on the drive to Holyhead and the ferry. 

-Your dad never liked me, so he didn’t. 

-He did.

-He did not, she said. -He thought I was a slut.  He said it, sure.

-He didn’t say that.

-More or less, he did.  You told me that, yourself, remember.  I’m not making it up.  He never liked me, so I won’t be going around pretending I like him.  I hate that house.  It’s miserable. 

-She kissed me, Joe said now.

-In the school?

The man I knew – I thought I knew; I used to know – would have answered, ‘No, in the arse,’ or something like that.

-Yes, he said. –She remembered me. 

I didn’t know Joe well. 

I used to. 

We left school for good on the same day.  He got work; I went to college, to UCD.  He had money, wages – a salary.  I had none until after I’d graduated.  But we kept in touch.  We both lived at home, a ten-minute walk from each other.  We listened to records in my house about once a week, in the front room.  He bought most of the records; mine was the house where we could blast them out.  We played them so loud we could put our hands on the window glass and feel the song we were hearing.  My mother was dead and my father didn’t seem to mind.  He told me years later he just wanted to see me happy.  He endured the noise – the Pistols, Ian Dury, the Clash, Elvis Costello – because he thought it made me happy.  I’d have been happy if he’d hammered at the wall with a shoe or his fist and told me to turn it fuckin’ down.  I’d have been happy if I’d felt I had to fight him. 

We went drinking, myself and Joe, when I had the money.  At Christmas and in October, when I came back from working in West Germany and London, before I had to spend the money I’d earned on books and bus fares.  We’d get quickly drunk and roar. I rushed straight into anger.  I thumped things, and myself.  I let myself go, glimpsed the man I could become.  I pulled back, and copied Joe.  He drank, I drank.  He laughed, I laughed.  I roared when he roared.

-She remembered you?

-Yeah, he said. –She did.  Immediately.  Like I said. 

I looked at him again.  I could see why she’d have recognised him.  The boy – the young man – was still there.  His head was the same shape.  He’d worn glasses back then and he still did – or, he did again – the same kind of black-framed glasses.  He still had his hair.  It was grey now, most of it, but it had never been very dark.  He’d put on weight but not much, and none of it around his face and neck. 

-Where were you? I asked him.

-In the school, he said. –I told you.

-Where, though?

-Outside the maths room, he said. –Waiting.

-For your turn with the teacher.

-Yeah, he said. –There were four or five people – mostly mothers – ahead of me.  And I’d no one else to see – I’d seen all the others.  We divided the list.

-Hang on, I said. –Trish was there as well?

Trish was his wife.

-Yeah, he said. –She was somewhere else.  Queueing up for another teacher. 

-You kissed the love of your life while Trish was in the building?

-Big building, he said. –It’s a fuckin’ school – in fairness.

That was more like the man I thought I knew.  The man I’d  wanted to be.

-You kissed her, I said.

-She kissed me.

-Where was Trish, exactly?

-Exactly, Davy?  Exactly?  Is this a murder investigation? 

-Okay.

-For fuck sake, Davy.

-Okay – sorry.  Go on. 

-The home economics room, he said. –Or wordwork.   Somewhere else.  We took four teachers each, to get it over with as quickly as possible.  Even at that, it took all afternoon.  It’s the only chance the teachers get to talk to adults.  So, they fuckin’ grab it.  I was lucky.

-How come?

-I got to meet the maths teacher, he said. –A gobshite, by the way.  But I was outside his door.  I just happened to be there.
           
-And she walked in while you were waiting.
           
-Right place, right time.  Yeah.  Like I said – I was lucky. 
           
-One of your kids does home economics and woodwork?
           
-What?
           
-You said home economics or woodwork.  Trish was in one of those rooms. 
           
-You’re being Columbo again, Davy.
           
-Lay off. 
           
-I just meant – like, for example.  The rooms.  Trish was somewhere else, in one of the other rooms, you know.  Way off somewhere in the building.
           
-Which kid was it?
           
I’d never met his children and I didn’t know their names.  We told each other about the kids, brought each other up to date whenever we met, and then forgot about them.  I hadn’t seen Trish in twenty years. 
           
-Holly, he said.
           
-You sure?
           
-Yeah, he said. –Of course, I am.  Fuck off.
           
-Okay.
           
-You’re being a bit of a prick, Davy.
           
-I’m not.
           
-You are.
           
-It’s a bit of a shock.
           
-Why does it even matter?
           
-Okay.
           
-To you.
           
-I know.
           
I’d never seen him with his children but I knew he was a good father.  And I knew what that meant.  He was reliable.  He’d given them their routines.  He’d come home at much the same time every evening.  He’d picked them up from football or gymnastics and he’d always been there on time.  They’d seen him filling the dishwasher and the washing machine.  They’d seen him cooking at the weekends; they’d probably preferred his cooking to Trish’s.  He’d served them Fanta in wine glasses on Saturday nights.  He’d told them he loved them, twice a day, start and end.  He’d read to them – the same book, again and again - gone swimming with them, slept on a chair beside them when they’d been kept overnight in Temple Street Children’s Hospital.  He’d read about asthma, eczema, OCD, intersexuality.  He wasn’t a man who didn’t know what subjects his kids had done in school.  He would never have pretended that he was that man. 
           
He was right.  It shouldn’t have mattered.  I shouldn’t have cared.  But it did.  And I did.