• --

Credits

Writer: Roddy Doyle; Genre: Fiction; Publisher: Viking
C+

Flourishing an ardor for black music familiar since his 1987 debut, The Commitments, and a sidewalk lyricism common to Irish writers with Joycean aspirations, Doyle produces an almost lively slab of hokum in Oh, Play That Thing. In 1924, the hustling Dubliner Henry Smart — star of Doyle's 1999 novel A Star Called Henry — arrives in an America ''bigger than the states, bigger than the world. America was everything possible.'' Initial bounces through the worlds of sandwich-board advertising and bootlegging lead our hero to adventures that would embarrass Zelig: ''I stayed right beside Louis Armstrong. I stuck to him, and it began to make sense. I knew why I was there.'' Why? Because in the absence of a genuine story, phony history must suffice.


 

Add Your Comments

The rules: Keep it clean, and stay on the subject or we might delete your comment. If you see inappropriate language, e-mail us. You must have javascript enabled to submit a comment.
--
Change/Edit your grade
characters remaining