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Roddy Doyle Interview, plus links to author biography, book summaries, excerpts and reviews

Roddy Doyle
Photo: Mark Nixon

Roddy Doyle

An interview with Roddy Doyle

In a video Q&A, Irish author Roddy Doyle reveals the significance of ghosts in his writing and considers the role of the afterlife in A Greyhound of a Girl.

What inspired you to write a novel about four generations of women?
Two fictional women came together in my head. I wanted to write about a girl, just before she officially becomes a teenager, who feels and anticipates the changes that are happening to her. So, that was one of the women. I called her Mary. The other woman was inspired by my grandmother. She died in 1928, when my mother was a little girl. Obviously, I never knew her. I always wondered about her—what she'd been like and what she would have been like if she'd lived to be an older woman. I decided to make her Mary's great-grandmother. Between these two women there had to be two more generations—Mary's mother and grandmother. That made four: girl, mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother. They'd be very different but would have a lot in common too.

Are the characters in A Greyhound Of a Girl inspired by women in your family or life?
Tansey, the great-grandmother, is inspired by my grandmother, whose name was actually Ellen. As I said, she died in 1928, of the flu. My mother was only three when it happened. It's a sad story. What makes it sadder is the fact that my mother grew up knowing almost nothing about her. She couldn't remember her face, although she could remember her mother's hands doing things— peeling an apple, for example. She didn't even know her mother's name and knew nothing about where she'd come from or where the rest of her mother's family lived. When my mother was much older, in her fifties, she found letters addressed to my grandfather. They'd been written in the 1920s, and they all came from America—from New York. The surname on most of them was Beekman. My mother told someone she knew who worked for the Irish telephone service, who then photocopied all the Beekman pages from the New York phone directory. My mother wrote to all of them. Two answered. She discovered she had cousins living on Long Island: her mother's family had emigrated together and settled there. My mother visited them, and they came to Ireland. She was delighted to find this family, and they were delighted to have Irish cousins. It was a very happy ending to a sad story. Tansey—the ghost—is inspired by that story. I wanted her to come back to life—like my mother's family had in my mother's life.

What made you choose the east coast of Ireland as the setting for the women's journey?
There are two reasons. Firstly, the more obvious journey in Irish stories is from east to west, from Dublin City, on the east coast, to the beautiful, wild landscape of the west, in Galway. It's been done many times, and I wanted to go for a different route. Secondly, my mother's father and mother both came from Wexford, in the southeast of the country. I know it very well, and love it. When I was a child, it seemed like a long journey there, although it was only seventy-five miles. But the roads were bad; the cars were slower. Today, the journey can be done very quickly—it's a straight highway all the way. I thought it would be amusing, and interesting, for the older women to experience a different kind of trip, to the same place—if that makes sense. The house the women visit, the ruin, is inspired by a house that it actually isn't a ruin at all, that is still lived in by my mother's cousins.

Is there someone you wish would visit you in ghost form? What would you talk about?
I never really knew my grandparents. They were either dead before I was born or died soon after. I'd love to meet one, or all, of them now and chat with them as an adult. My grandfathers were both involved in the War of Independence here in Ireland, in the early 1920s. My father's mother I remember a bit. She reared not only her own large family but the families of two of her sisters as well. She lived in a house with no running water, but she was very elegant. Judging by the stories I grew up hearing, they were all interesting, funny people who lived very full lives.

This book illustrates the importance of family. How important is family in your life?
I grew up in a family, and I now have a family of my own. So my own family is vital to me. But I don't think I have an opinion on family life outside of my own. When I start a story with a character, one of the first questions I have to ask myself is, "Does she have brothers or sisters?" and "What are they like—older or younger?" The fictional family starts to grow, because it's part of the story.

Whether you are writing for adults or children, you often write about children and teens. What in particular interests you about young people, and how has your own childhood influenced your writing?
I like the way young people take command of their lives, especially the language. They invent new words; they put a new rhythm on old phrases; they put great energy into how they express themselves. Even one angry word from a teenager can seem to carry great confidence and hope. At the moment, I'm writing a novel for adults about a man in his late forties. I particularly enjoy writing about him in the company of his children—how they express themselves, how they get across their own ideas, how their personalities are captured in the words that they choose—or, in this case, the words I chose for them.

Any writer will tell you that their childhood is an important part of their toolkit—or something like that! I've used my school days, the locality I grew up in, the way it changed from rural to urban, the music I used to love—all sorts of small moments from my childhood and teen years push their way to the front of my head when I'm writing. I often push them back!

You run a writing center for underprivileged children and teens in Dublin. How did writing make a difference in your life, and what difference do you think it can make in the lives of young people?
The writing center, called Fighting Words, is actually for all young people, regardless of their circumstances. We see creative writing as an important human right. Children who are otherwise privileged often don't get the opportunity to express themselves creatively; as they get older, creativity is pushed aside and considered unimportant. It's a different kind of poverty.

The most striking thing about writing, I find as I get older, is that your life can be your research. The happy moments, the awful ones—they all can inspire, or form part of, a piece of writing. I'm not talking about autobiography—I've no real interest in it. I have a character listening to a piece of music: what words would I use to describe his reaction to it? I have a character, a child, standing in front of a refrigerator: what does she hope to find in there? These are questions we can all answer because we've lived them. It's a question of selecting the words.

In the video Q&A below, Irish author Roddy Doyle reveals the significance of ghosts in his writing and considers the role of the afterlife in A Greyhound of a Girl.

Roddy Doyle on ghosts, memory, and the afterlife in A Greyhound of a Girl

Unless otherwise stated, this interview was conducted at the time the book was first published, and is reproduced with permission of the publisher. This interview may not be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the copyright holder.

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Books by this Author

Books by Roddy Doyle at BookBrowse
The Women Behind the Door jacket Life Without Children jacket Smile jacket A Greyhound of a Girl jacket
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Read-Alikes

All the books below are recommended as read-alikes for Roddy Doyle but some maybe more relevant to you than others depending on which books by the author you have read and enjoyed. So look for the suggested read-alikes by title linked on the right.
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    If you enjoyed:
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    Try:
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  • Jeanne Birdsall

    Jeanne Birdsall

    Birdsall was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and raised in the suburbs. She decided to become a writer at the age of ten - but she didn't start until she was 41. She worked first on other jobs, most notably as a ... (more)

    If you enjoyed:
    A Greyhound of a Girl

    Try:
    The Penderwicks
    by Jeanne Birdsall

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