

The speech becomes the music of the story, celebrating, championing the noise and heartbreak and good cheer of everyday life, even as the lead performers still dream of finding the best music of the past and preserving it for new generations. The Guts is made up mostly out of dialogue, in fact it's one of the most dialogue driven novels Doyle has ever written, standing in a tradition that goes back through Elmore Leonard and William Gaddis all the way to Doyle's fellow Irishman Samuel Beckett. There's not as much music in this novel as in The Commitments, but, as there was in that first book, plenty of speech, line after line after filthy line of natural Dublin speech, narrative-driving dialogue that moves the story alone even as it expresses the deep emotions of the speakers. Like his guts were moving, waking and demanding to be filled.

"He was happy," we hear in one of the few narrative passages in these predominantly dialogue loaded pages. He's forthrightly living with cancer, and seeing chances at fun and play beyond the treatments he endures. He now works for a boutique music service that hunts down rare recordings for fans of old blues and soul - though his oldest son Marvin is a rising soul musician.Ĭomforted by his wife Aoife, jawing with his da, and ready to make peace between himself and his brother, talking truth about his illness with his children, renewing friendships with some of his old pals from the Commitments days (all of them sounding off almost line by line with the foulest mouths in contemporary fiction), Jimmy now takes his life a day at a time. Jimmy's repaired his soul, too, after all these years, tuned down his dreams just a bit. The Guts brings Jimmy Rabbitte's story up to date: the once feckless music entrepreneur has just emerged from the hospital after having had part of his bowel removed because of cancer, and is about to begin chemotherapy (which he calls "Chernobyl"). That's the gospel according to Dubliner Roddy Doyle's first novel, The Commitments. Jimmy rounded up his pal Outspan and Declan and some other folks, including soul veteran Joey The Lips on trumpet, pretty Imelda and Natalie - the Commitment-ettes - as backup, and the rest was history. Restless and determined young Dubliner Jimmy Rabbitte put together a neighborhood soul band in 1987. Your purchase helps support NPR programming.


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