Awaiting the results of his Leaving Cert, the final examination in the Irish secondary school system, Matthew Connelly anticipates a summer of knocking about Dublin with his mates: philosophical Rez, amiable Cocker, and twitchy Kearney. If he's lucky, he might get together with the gorgeous, college-bound Jen. But Matthew's parents insist that he find a job and plan for the future. Undeterred, Matthew and his friends seek oblivion in drink and drugs, with Kearney on a quest for sensory stimulation that further blurs the boundaries between reality and the insidious imaginative space he crams with violent video games, atrocities on the nightly news, and pornography. A visit to the United States further pushes Kearney to extremes that shock his spaced-out friends to take action that is troubling and ultimately ambiguous.
VERDICT Recalling Irvine Welsh's work, especially Glue, and Niall Griffith's Grits, Doyle's brutal debut takes place in 2003, when Ireland was poised for economic recovery after the demise of the Celtic Tiger. It paints a stark picture of middle-class youth unable to articulate why the unimpaired life is not worth living.
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