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Bezig met laden... De bus (1991)door Roddy Doyle
Bezig met laden...
Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. The Van picks up pretty much where The Snapper left off. Daughter Sharon is now a new mom with a toddler, Gina. Jimmy Rabbitte's house is getting too small even though some of his children have moved out. A baby can do that. Unemployed and bored, Rabbitte babysits Gina until his best friend, Bimbo, loses his job. Suddenly as men of leisure they have all the time in the world to play endless games of pitch and putt, ogle teenage girls and roam the bars drinking and trying to pick up women (or as they say, "chasing women who had "fine sets of lungs" and "their arses fit nicely on the stool; there was noting flowing over the sides" p 266). It isn't until Bimbo buys a van with the hopes of turning it into a burger food truck that the two men start to have a purpose for getting up in the morning. They have no idea what they are doing and in the end it nearly destroys their friendship. By turns funny and desperate, The Van was my least favorite of the series. ( ) immy Rabbitte senior, disoccupato e squattrinato, trascina la sua esistenza fra il pub e il campo di calcio dei ragazzi. Quando anche il suo migliore amico, Bimbo, viene licenziato, i due decidono di fare qualcosa per riscattarsi ai propri occhi e a quelli delle famiglie: acquistare un furgoncino e mettersi davanti ai locali, sulle spiagge, a vendere hamburger e patatine. E un'impresa che porterà un po' di soldi, una quantità di avventure impreviste, parecchi momenti esilaranti, e qualche subbuglio in famiglia. The Van by Roddy Doyle Roddy Doyle's wonderful Rabbitte family saga—known as the Barrytown trilogy—concludes in [The Van]. Jimmy Rabbitte Sr and his good friend Bimbo Reeves go into business selling fish and chips out of an old van. It's about love, loyalty, sharing, trusting, working yer arse off, dealing with both setbacks and success. This novel is longer that the trilogy's first two, but it shares their attributes. The setup is this. Jimmy Sr is out of work. He is a plasterer, a master of the finish coat, the embellishments, the details. Builders are cutting their costs using sheetrock instead of multiple coats of plaster over lath. Jimmy is expendable to the builders, but not to his family. His income lost, the family is paring back, way back. Jimmy no longer meets "the lads" for a pint every evening. The days are long and he can't find productive things to do. He cares for his granddaughter, Gina, who was born in the previous book, [The Snapper]. But he's bored, ashamed, depressed. One day he does meet the lads, and when he arrives, Bimbo is crying. He can't draw out an explanation. Finally, Bimbo says:
One big difference for Bimbo is that he gets a one-time payment (like severance, I think). But like Jimmy Sr., he's unhappy in his idleness. The sudden absence of "the chipper van" from its usual spot outside a local pub, prompts Bimbo to ask Bertie, another of the lads, who's always got something to sell.
Not long after, Bertie tells Bimbo and Jimmy Sr that he wants them to see something. It's a derelict van.
But of course he does, and he even helps. They install the wheels and tires, getting it off the blocks that have supported it. It's got no engine, so it has to be towed to Bimbo's place. It has to be degreased and scoured and cleaned outside and in. It's got no electricity, of course, and no running water. The fryer and grill use bottled gas. Once the van is as clean as they can make it, they tackle the provisions, learning how best to cut and stockpile chips, how to batter the fish. Although Jimmy Sr has no money to invest, Bimbo offers him a half interest in the new business. Therein will lie the rub. Almost from the start, the business is a success. But as with Jimmy Jr's band in [The Commitments], success leads to petty jealousies and bickering and sulking. Rest assured that all works out, eventually. This is one of those rare novels that's both superbly written and leaves you feeling warm, fuzzy, and full of good cheer. "The Van" relates the adventures of two lifelong friends who, when faced with some unexpected financial difficulties, start up a business venture. That's the short version: it's also a story about how the modern world -- and the money it often brings -- changed Ireland at the end of the nineteen eighties. Doyle's careful to note the technological and social changes that are happening around his characters and what that means for their way of life. There's also a bit of economic critique here: Doyle seems to be wondering whether friendship can really survive in any sort of plainly hierarchical economic arrangement. The center of the book, though, is the friendship that exists between Jimmy Sr. and Bimbo. I can't, right now, think of the last time I saw a friendship described in a novel that seemed so sincere and deeply felt. It's also worth reading "The Van" just for the prose: Doyle's an absolute magician with dialogue: the conversations here flow easily, freely, and hilariously. He's also unapologetically Irish: the book's full of marvelous slang and regionalisms that I'd never seen anywhere else, and Doyle, to his credit, doesn't condescend to his non-Irish readers by explaining every unfamiliar usage. All in all, an excellent read. Recommended. geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
Onderdeel van de reeks(en)Barrytown (3) Onderdeel van de uitgeversreeks(en)Rainbow pocketboeken (222) Is opgenomen inHeeft de bewerking
De Ierse Jimmy Rabbitte is al een tijdje werkloos en begint samen met een vriend een rijdende hamburgertent. Ze maken van alles mee, van het WK voetbal tot een overheidscontrole waaruit blijkt dat ze niet aan de hygiënevereisten voldoen. Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden.
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)823.914Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999LC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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