Review: The Road To McCarthy By Pete McCarthy Essay, Research Paper
Comic turn The Road to McCarthyby Pete McCarthy 432pp, Hodder After his rollicking romp around Ireland in the best-selling McCarthy’s Bar, Pete McCarthy has now set out on a roistering rollick around the globe. The Road to McCarthy is ostensibly a hunt for Irish McCarthys, all the way from Morocco, New York and Tasmania to Montana and Montserrat; but it reads less like a comic tour of the world than a tour of the world for the sake of being comic about it. Which, to be sure, the book frequently is. Wedged between rawly emotive mobile-phone users on a train, McCarthy ponders the unspoken agreement by which we are all unable to hear the other people bawling intimate details of their private lives a mere two inches from our ears. Under no circumstances, he reflects, must you acknowledge your existence by joining in with “She sounds like a right bitch”. He is wittily perceptive about Irish-Americans who sprawl around bars which play Irish republican hip-hop wearing T-shirts reading “Unrepentant Fenian Bastard”. Vacating a hotel room, he ritually scoops up the minor toiletries against the day when, down on his luck, he will open a market stall stacked with shower caps, sewing kits, aeroplane socks and blindfolds, and mint imperials nicked from Chinese restaurants. Even so, the book tries far too hard. Beneath its feckless Mickery lies a rather more compulsive drive to load every phrase with waggery. The Road to McCarthy is mercilessly, relentlessly funny, unable to look at a road sign or a plate of pancakes without draping it with a dutiful wisecrack. An airport trek to the luggage carousel is “so long and arduous it could have been sponsored to raise funds for mental health”; a Tasmanian Legs’n'Breasts Chicken shop cues a fantasy of a Tits’n'Ass Pie Shop; McCarthy isn’t ever alone, just “on his lonesome”. It is not that it isn’t witty, just too worked and wilful. This stand-up style is a pity, because McCarthy is an accomplished writer, snappy and shrewd, who simply won’t trust himself. It is not that he can’t write comedy, rather that he doesn’t yet know how to write without it. If his blend of fantasy, irreverence a
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