
Bullfighting
Stories
Author: Roddy Doyle
Narrator: Lorcan Cranitch
Unabridged: 5 hr 29 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 05/01/2011
Categories: Fiction, Short Stories, Literary Fiction

Author: Roddy Doyle
Narrator: Lorcan Cranitch
Unabridged: 5 hr 29 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 05/01/2011
Categories: Fiction, Short Stories, Literary Fiction
Roddy Doyle is the author of ten acclaimed novels, several collections of stories, and several works for children and young adults. In 2009 he received the Irish PEN Award for Literature. The Commitments was made into a motion picture in 1991, and Paddy Clarke Ha-Ha-Ha won the Man Booker Prize, Britain’s highest literary award. The Van was a finalist for the Booker Prize. He lives in Dublin where he was born in 1958.
Lorcan Cranitch is an Irish actor. He has starred in Ballykissangel, Shackleton, Hornblower, and the HBO/BBC production of Rome. He has appeared on stage with the Glasgow Citizens’ Theatre and with the RSC, notably as John Hall in The Herbal Bed.
Roddy Doyle sure knows what goes on in the minds of straight, white 40-something Dublin men, because they're the protagonists in each one of the 13 stories in Bullfighting. Approaching midlife, Doyle's men are slowing down, taking stock, facing mortality, yet not going down without a fight – or at le......more
These stories are no match for Kevin Barry's whose collection I just finished. Too simple, too easy, too sweet. The writing is common, the voices in the stories are too much alike, speaking in short sentences and constantly correcting themselves. "And that made it worse. And made him more annoyed. A......more
Roddy Doyle and I have an interesting relationship (though he doesn’t know it, of course). We’re the same age, plus-or-minus eighteen-months, were born sixty-miles or so apart. But I left Ireland at a very tender age, and he didn’t. I liked The Commitments when I first read it, but when Paddy Clarke......more
“There is not a writer currently working in English who can match Doyle for the fluency with which he tacks back and forth between the hilarious and the heartbreaking. ‘Sad and good had become the same thing’” thinks a mourner in one story who has attended too many funerals, and in this collection Doyle hits that sweet spot again and again.” New York Times Book Review
“There are writers who make it look hard, and then there are writers who make it look easy. Roddy Doyle is one of the latter, as he proves in each of the thirteen stories in Bullfighting. The stories are rueful, sad, amusing, stifled, haunting.” Denver Post
“If there’s one thing the Irish can do, it’s tell stories. Doyle is no exception; he does them proud. He writes with humor and pathos. He has a justly acclaimed ear for the Irish voice. He has keen insights into the Ireland of the twenty-first century and keener insights into the men and women who inhabit it.” Seattle Post-Intelligencer
“These rather tenderhearted sketches of how men get old in contemporary Ireland may not be autobiographical but they’re true; they come from life as lived.” Evening Standard (London)
“Probably the finest collection of Irish short stories since James Joyce’s Dubliners. The delicacy of emotion is here, the spare but elegant writing, the heartbreak and humor…There’s laughter and sadness, provided by a writer at his peak, teasing meaning out of the ordinary with exquisite skill and delicacy.” Globe and Mail (Toronto)
“Roddy Doyle’s Bullfighting offers a series of rare and beautiful mid-life meditations.” Sunday Express (London)
“The men in Doyle’s sardonic and bittersweet collection are teetering on the edge of middle age, and while they’re not always desperate to stay young, there’s something terrifying about the future for each of them…They’re the men for whom reflection, even when tinged with regret, is cathartic.” Publishers Weekly
“Doyle has a way with character, and he uses dialogue as much to develop a character as he does to tell a story. Although these stories might depict the mundanity of urban life, they do it with aplomb.” Booklist
“Lorcan Cranitch delivers a one-man-show as he interprets Doyle’s second collection of stories. He expertly complements Doyle’s writing style with an authentic Irish brogue and takes it to another level with astounding changes in pitch for women’s, children’s, and even men’s voices. Cranitch’s expressive delivery of Doyle’s works is so complex and entertaining that it nearly makes the content of each story superfluous. One hears Doyle’s dry wit and insights into the Irish male persona as Cranitch deftly leaps from emotion to emotion. Men audibly struggle for their lost power, virility, health, social standing, and love while outwardly taking the culturally expected stance of bravura. Heartrending situations peppered with pub banter and weary women create vivid emotional terrain, both hilarious and moving. Winner of an AudioFile Earphones Award, a 2012 Audie Finalist.” AudioFile