Paula Spencer

Paula Spencer

by RoddyDoyle (Author)

Synopsis

When we first met Paula Spencer - in "The Woman Who Walked into Doors" - she was thirty-nine, recently widowed, an alcoholic struggling to hold her family together. "Paula Spencer" begins on the eve of Paula's forty-ninth birthday. She hasn't had a drink for four months and five days. Her youngest children, Jack and Leanne, are still living with her. They're grand kids, but she worries about Leanne. Paula still works as a cleaner, but all the others doing the job now seem to come from Eastern Europe, and the checkout girls in the supermarket are Nigerian. You can get a cappuccino in the cafe, and her sister Carmel is thinking of buying a holiday home in Bulgaria. Paula's got four grandchildren now; two of them are called Marcus and Sapphire. Reviewing "The Woman Who Walked into Doors", Mary Gordon wrote: "It is the triumph of this novel that Mr Doyle - entirely without condescension - shows the inner life of this battered house-cleaner to be the same stuff as that of the heroes of the great novels of Europe." Her words hold true for this new novel. "Paula Spencer" is brave, tenacious and very funny. The novel that bears her name is another triumph for Roddy Doyle.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Edition: 1st edition
Publisher: Jonathan Cape
Published: 07 Sep 2006

ISBN 10: 0224078666
ISBN 13: 9780224078665
Book Overview: Ten years on from The Woman Who Walked into Doors, Roddy Doyle returns to one of his greatest characters, Paula Spencer

Media Reviews
Praise for The Woman Who Walked into Doors :
[This novel] honours not the female experience in the abstract, but the experience of this one woman, Paula Spencer; it examines it with tenderness, but with fearless clearsightedness. And it's funny in places too.
- The New York Times Book Review

A tour-de-force of voice.
- The Gazette (Montreal)
'Captivating new novel...It's like watching a real person getting a white-knuckled grasp on day to day life....You want to cheer Paula on...As ever, Doyle's dialogue is pithy, his mordant comedy direct and delicious. Another of the sheer pleasures of Doyle's writing is his lightness of touch, the way he keeps out of his characters' paths. We're allowed to get Paula, her story and what it means, without anything underlined, emboldened or signposted. No aids for the thinking-impaired here, just pure story and a superbly drawn heroine.'
- The Independent
'an amazingly cheerful story, full of real resilience...she is so utterly likeable that we cheer for her, and every tiny victory is a triumph for us as well...Roddy Doyle has done the impossible- he has made Paula Spencer even more unforgettable the second time round'
- Maeve Binchy in The Times

'Doyle...writes like a recording machine of the heart and voice. Paula Spencer is suffused with love and sex, violence and innocence ...Doyle's dialogue...is the core of the genius of his writing and of the happily politically incorrect imagination he uses to choose each perfectly pitched word... a marvellous novel'
- Financial Times
'Paula's story is set against the backdrop of the changing face of Ireland, skilfully interweaving Paula's personal tale with major events, both national and global...the writing enables the reader to become totally immersed in every aspect of Paula's daily life.'
- The Daily Express
'Doyle has created a little masterwork, a gem of persuasive realism'
- Scotland on Sunday
Doyle's trademark, staccato style...encapsulates here the tension which attends Paula's everystep...The honed, humane artistry of Paula Spencer exceeds the ...plaudits of demotic fluency that have greeted...Doyle's work; like its eponymous protagonist, this brave, mature novel demands to be taken seriously
- Times Literary Supplement
'a vintage performance that will leave his readers, new and old, wondering if they aren't just a little wiser and a little better for having read this novel. This is one of the things we might hope for from art, and this is a novel which adds to one's sense of the possibilities of betterment.'
- Waterstones Books Quarterly
'A masterclass in how to produce gripping dramatic moments with the fewest possible words. This is a book with huge emotional impact.'
- Marie Claire
'Paula is a triumphantly original character, and her gently anarchic sense of humour, her ruthless honesty and the bursting sense of fun that permeates the book scotch any hint of sentimentalism. Doyle constructs his set-pieces and orders the narrative with a craft so unobtrusively elegant and clever that it demands a second reading. This is a splendid piece of work.''
- The Independent on Sunday
'this is a magnificent novel...not once does Doyle offer any sentimental cop-out or wallow in bleakness...It's a disciplined piece of writing, full of humour and immense empathy -- and what more can you ask than that?'
- The Scotsman
'A painful, funny, humane novel: beautifully written, addictively readable and so confident'
- The Times
'a magnificent achievement...Moments of catharsis are to be found in the almost imperceptible shifts of understanding...It celebrates that among the clod hoppers there are amazons'
- TheGuardian
'a warm-hearted look at one woman's will to survive'
- Red
'Delivered in punchy, almost punch-drunk, first-person prose shot through with dark comic wit, Doyle's novel is sympathetic without being sentimental, and its portrait of survival, coupled with our need to reach out to each other, feels universal'
- Metro
'every detail seems perfectly chosen'
- Literary Review

'Doyle's style is cinematic and accessible...a complex, funny story'
- Eve
'A blisteringly realistic and wry-humoured view of a woman struggling to keep her life together and make her family closer'
- Good Housekeeping
'the story of a survivor. Harrowing, moving and emotional'
- Evening Telegraph
'an intoxicating sequel...a phenomenally rewarding read'
- The Observer
'Doyle's characteristic warmth shines through... he tells this tale of redemption with insight and respect.'
- New Statesman
Praise for The Woman Who Walked into Doors :
This novel honours not the female experience in the abstract, but the experience of this one woman, Paula Spencer; it examines it with tenderness, but with fearless clearsightedness. And it's funny in places too.
- The New York Times Book Review

A tour-de-force of voice.
- The Gazette (Montreal)

From the Hardcover edition.


Doyle returns to the heroine of his 1996 novel, The Woman Who Walked Into Doors, in this engrossing tale. . . . Doyle's love of language and acute ear for dialogue keep his narrative thrumming . . . inspiring . . . This is an extraordinary story about an ordinary life.
- People
Reading Paula Spencer is pure, undiluted pleasure, and it's not necessary to have read the first novel to thoroughly enjoy this one.
- The Washington Post Book World
Paula Spencer is written with an immediacy that makes us feel like we've crawled inside her head. . . . The remarkable intimacy achieved using third-person narrative is partly what's enthralling here, but it's also the humanity, wit and stubborn resilience. . . . Doyle's new novel is an utterly convincing, worthy sequel.
- San Francisco Chronicle
A tale of ultimate personal struggle, and told superbly. . . . The book's sparseness serves to ratchet up its intensity, compressing every episode and emotion. . . . Paula Spencer is neither gloomy nor glib. It is not patronizing or falsely melodramatic. Instead it brims with compassion and acuity and Mr. Doyle shines a light on a supposedly ordinary life, tenderly illuminating its extraordinary contours.
- The Wall Street Journal
A nakedly personal tale . . . this is a book about a brave woman living a life of work and family. This is as real as realism gets. - The Atlanta Journal Constitution
Its protagonist is a phoenix still half-covered in ash, and that itself suggests a story of both flight and atonement. Doyle's dialogue can be masterfully swift and precise.
- Boston Globe

'Captivating new novel...It's like watching a real persongetting a white-knuckled grasp on day to day life....You want to cheer Paula on...As ever, Doyle's dialogue is pithy, his mordant comedy direct and delicious. Another of the sheer pleasures of Doyle's writing is his lightness of touch, the way he keeps out of his characters' paths. We're allowed to get Paula, her story and what it means, without anything underlined, emboldened or signposted. No aids for the thinking-impaired here, just pure story and a superbly drawn heroine.'
- The Independent
'an amazingly cheerful story, full of real resilience...she is so utterly likeable that we cheer for her, and every tiny victory is a triumph for us as well...Roddy Doyle has done the impossible- he has made Paula Spencer even more unforgettable the second time round'
- Maeve Binchy in The Times

'Doyle...writes like a recording machine of the heart and voice. Paula Spencer is suffused with love and sex, violence and innocence ...Doyle's dialogue...is the core of the genius of his writing and of the happily politically incorrect imagination he uses to choose each perfectly pitched word... a marvellous novel'
- Financial Times
'Paula's story is set against the backdrop of the changing face of Ireland, skilfully interweaving Paula's personal tale with major events, both national and global...the writing enables the reader to become totally immersed in every aspect of Paula's daily life.'
- The Daily Express
'Doyle has created a little masterwork, a gem of persuasive realism'
- Scotland on Sunday
Doyle's trademark, staccato style...encapsulates here the tension which attends Paula's every step...The honed, humane artistry of Paula Spencer exceedsthe ...plaudits of demotic fluency that have greeted...Doyle's work; like its eponymous protagonist, this brave, mature novel demands to be taken seriously
- Times Literary Supplement
'a vintage performance that will leave his readers, new and old, wondering if they aren't just a little wiser and a little better for having read this novel. This is one of the things we might hope for from art, and this is a novel which adds to one's sense of the possibilities of betterment.'
- Waterstones Books Quarterly
'A masterclass in how to produce gripping dramatic moments with the fewest possible words. This is a book with huge emotional impact.'
- Marie Claire
'Paula is a triumphantly original character, and her gently anarchic sense of humour, her ruthless honesty and the bursting sense of fun that permeates the book scotch any hint of sentimentalism. Doyle constructs his set-pieces and orders the narrative with a craft so unobtrusively elegant and clever that it demands a second reading. This is a splendid piece of work.''
- The Independent on Sunday
'this is a magnificent novel...not once does Doyle offer any sentimental cop-out or wallow in bleakness...It's a disciplined piece of writing, full of humour and immense empathy -- and what more can you ask than that?'
- The Scotsman
'A painful, funny, humane novel: beautifully written, addictively readable and so confident'
- The Times
'a magnificent achievement...Moments of catharsis are to be found in the almost imperceptible shifts of understanding...It celebrates that among the clod hoppers there are amazons'
- The Guardian
'a warm-hearted look at one woman's will tosurvive'
- Red
'Delivered in punchy, almost punch-drunk, first-person prose shot through with dark comic wit, Doyle's novel is sympathetic without being sentimental, and its portrait of survival, coupled with our need to reach out to each other, feels universal'
- Metro
'every detail seems perfectly chosen'
- Literary Review

'Doyle's style is cinematic and accessible...a complex, funny story'
- Eve
'A blisteringly realistic and wry-humoured view of a woman struggling to keep her life together and make her family closer'
- Good Housekeeping
'the story of a survivor. Harrowing, moving and emotional'
- Evening Telegraph
'an intoxicating sequel...a phenomenally rewarding read'
- The Observer
'Doyle's characteristic warmth shines through... he tells this tale of redemption with insight and respect.'
- New Statesman
Praise for The Woman Who Walked into Doors :
This novel honours not the female experience in the abstract, but the experience of this one woman, Paula Spencer; it examines it with tenderness, but with fearless clearsightedness. And it's funny in places too.
- The New York Times Book Review

A tour-de-force of voice.
- The Gazette (Montreal)

From the Hardcover edition.


Doyle returns to the heroine of his 1996 novel, The Woman Who Walked Into Doors, in this engrossing tale. . . . Doyle' s love of language and acute ear for dialogue keep his narrative thrumming . . . inspiring . . . This is an extraordinary story about an ordinary life.
- People
Reading Paula Spencer is pure, undiluted pleasure, and it' s not necessary to have read the first novel to thoroughly enjoy this one.
- The Washington Post Book World
Paula Spencer is written with an immediacy that makes us feel like we' ve crawled inside her head. . . . The remarkable intimacy achieved using third-person narrative is partly what' s enthralling here, but it' s also the humanity, wit and stubborn resilience. . . . Doyle' s new novel is an utterly convincing, worthy sequel.
- San Francisco Chronicle
A tale of ultimate personal struggle, and told superbly. . . . [The book' s] sparseness serves to ratchet up its intensity, compressing every episode and emotion. . . . Paula Spencer is neither gloomy nor glib. It is not patronizing or falsely melodramatic. Instead it brims with compassion and acuity and Mr. Doyle shines a light on a supposedly ordinary life, tenderly illuminating its extraordinary contours.
- The Wall Street Journal
A nakedly personal tale . . . this is a book about a brave woman living a life of work and family. This is as real as realism gets. - The Atlanta Journal Constitution
Its protagonist is a phoenix still half-covered in ash, and that itself suggests a story of both flight andatonement. Doyle' s dialogue can be masterfully swift and precise.
- Boston Globe

' Captivating new novel... It' s like watching a real person getting a white-knuckled grasp on day to day life... .You want to cheer Paula on... As ever, Doyle' s dialogue is pithy, his mordant comedy direct and delicious. Another of the sheer pleasures of Doyle' s writing is his lightness of touch, the way he keeps out of his characters' paths. We' re allowed to get Paula, her story and what it means, without anything underlined, emboldened or signposted. No aids for the thinking-impaired here, just pure story and a superbly drawn heroine.'
- The Independent
' an amazingly cheerful story, full of real resilience... she is so utterly likeable that we cheer for her, and every tiny victory is a triumph for us as well... Roddy Doyle has done the impossible- he has made Paula Spencer even more unforgettable the second time round'
- Maeve Binchy in The Times

' Doyle... writes like a recording machine of the heart and voice. [Paula Spencer] is suffused with love and sex, violence and innocence ... Doyle' s dialogue... is the core of the genius of his writing and of the happily politically incorrect imagination he uses to choose each perfectly pitched word... [a] marvellous novel'
- Financial Times
' Paula' s story is set against the backdrop of the changing face of Ireland, skilfully interweaving Paula' s personal tale with major events, both national and global... the writing enables the reader tobecome totally immersed in every aspect of Paula' s daily life.'
- The Daily Express
' Doyle has created a little masterwork, a gem of persuasive realism'
- Scotland on Sunday
Doyle' s trademark, staccato style... encapsulates here the tension which attends Paula' s every step... The honed, humane artistry of Paula Spencer exceeds the ... plaudits of demotic fluency that have greeted... Doyle' s work; like its eponymous protagonist, this brave, mature novel demands to be taken seriously
- Times Literary Supplement
' a vintage performance that will leave his readers, new and old, wondering if they aren' t just a little wiser and a little better for having read this novel. This is one of the things we might hope for from art, and this is a novel which adds to one' s sense of the possibilities of betterment.'
- Waterstones Books Quarterly
' A masterclass in how to produce gripping dramatic moments with the fewest possible words. This is a book with huge emotional impact.'
- Marie Claire
' Paula is a triumphantly original character, and her gently anarchic sense of humour, her ruthless honesty and the bursting sense of fun that permeates the book scotch any hint of sentimentalism. Doyle constructs his set-pieces and orders the narrative with a craft so unobtrusively elegant and clever that it demands a second reading. This is a splendid piece of work.' '
- The Independent on Sunday
' this is a magnificent novel... not once does Doyle offerany sentimental cop-out or wallow in bleakness... It' s a disciplined piece of writing, full of humour and immense empathy -- and what more can you ask than that?'
- The Scotsman
' A painful, funny, humane novel: beautifully written, addictively readable and so confident'
- The Times
' a magnificent achievement... Moments of catharsis are to be found in the almost imperceptible shifts of understanding... It celebrates that among the clod hoppers there are amazons'
- The Guardian
' a warm-hearted look at one woman' s will to survive'
- Red
' Delivered in punchy, almost punch-drunk, first-person prose shot through with dark comic wit, Doyle' s novel is sympathetic without being sentimental, and its portrait of survival, coupled with our need to reach out to each other, feels universal'
- Metro
' every detail seems perfectly chosen'
- Literary Review

' Doyle' s style is cinematic and accessible... a complex, funny story'
- Eve
' A blisteringly realistic and wry-humoured view of a woman struggling to keep her life together and make her family closer'
- Good Housekeeping
' the story of a survivor. Harrowing, moving and emotional'
- Evening Telegraph
' an intoxicating sequel... a phenomenally rewarding read'
- The Observer
' Doyle' s characteristic warmth shines through... [he] tells this tale of redemption with insight and respect.'
- New Statesman
Praise for The Woman Who Walked into Doors :
[This novel] honours not the female experience in the abstract, but the experience of this one woman, Paula Spencer; it examines it with tenderness, but with fearless clearsightedness. And it' s funny in places too.
- The New York Times Book Review

A tour-de-force of voice.
- The Gazette (Montreal)

From the Hardcover edition.


An extraordinary story about an ordinary life.
People
Brilliant . . . And Paula, as she patches a self together from remnants, emerges as an inspiring heroine.
The New Yorker
Beautifully nuanced and sweetly populist.
USA Today
A tale of ultimate personal struggle, and told superbly.
The Wall Street Journal
aAn extraordinary story about an ordinary life.a
a People
aBrilliant . . . And Paula, as she patches a self together from remnants, emerges as an inspiring heroine.a
a The New Yorker
aBeautifully nuanced and sweetly populist.a
a USA Today
aA tale of ultimate personal struggle, and told superbly.a
a The Wall Street Journal
An extraordinary story about an ordinary life.
- People

Brilliant . . . And Paula, as she patches a self together from remnants, emerges as an inspiring heroine.
- The New Yorker

Beautifully nuanced and sweetly populist.
- USA Today

A tale of ultimate personal struggle, and told superbly.
- The Wall Street Journal
Author Bio
Roddy Doyle was born in Dublin in 1958. He is the author of seven acclaimed novels and Rory & Ita, a memoir about his parents. He won the Booker Prize in 1993 for Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha.