The new novel from Irish Book Award-shortlisted author Rob Doyle; the story of the life of an invented novelist who has runaway success - a daring comedy and dazzling meditation on fiction and reality
'A writer living and thinking his way to the frontiers of human society' SpectatorCameo is the life story of invented Irish novelist Ren Duka, who has unexpected, runaway international success with a prolific series of autofictional novels.
What begins as a playful satire on literary ambition and the chaos of our times expands into a dazzling, polyphonic odyssey that challenges the border between fiction and reality.
As the Ren Duka novels race outwards in widening circles of influence, we encounter Dina Tatangelo, cult novelist of the New York underworld; a Japanese manga artist whose work eerily affects his family life; a grizzled Dublin taxi driver who just might ferry his passengers between worlds; a film-star facing public disgrace; and Rob Doyle, an author enduring a psychic and ontological crisis.
Cameo is at once a metaphysical architecture of the imagination, a human comedy full of unruly passions, and a self-portrait across multiple dimensions.
Details
ISBN13: 9781399631082
Format: Paperback / softback
Number of Pages: 288
Edition:
Publication Date: 20 Jan 2026
Publisher: Orion Publishing Co
Publication City, Country: London, United Kingdom
Dimensions (cm): 23.2(H)x15.2(L)x2.6(W)380
Weight (gm): 380
Author Biography
Rob Doyle is the author of four internationally acclaimed books:
Autobibliography,
Threshold,
This is the Ritual, and
Here Are the Young Men which was adapted as a film starring Anya Taylor-Joy and Dean-Charles Chapman, and was named as one of
Hot Press magazine's '20 Greatest Irish Novels 1916-2016'. Doyle's writing has appeared in the
New York Times,
Observer,
TLS,
Dublin Review, and many other publications, and his work has been translated into several languages. He is the editor of an anthology published by Dalkey Archive Press,
The Other Irish Tradition, and the book In
This Skull Hotel Where I Never Sleep.Reviews
There is much to delight in. The satire is relentless but sharp, skewering everything from identity politics to the fickle nature of celebrity. The jokes are funny . . . and the prose is impeccable . . . Masterful * Financial Times *
Rob Doyle's slutty third novel
Cameo . . . A true thrill ride through heaven and hell * GQ *
Like Swift before him, Rob Doyle is a social satirist of the highest order who exists entirely in a genre of one. Here the literary world - and, indeed, the true horrors of the real world - are examined with a sharp pen and keen eye for the utter absurdity of it all. From microscopic to widescreen, the picaresque stories of Ren Duka are first an exercise in obfuscation and then ultimately revelation, showing Doyle as a truly pan-international writer.
Cameo is provocative, transgressive, grimly hilarious, and it surely can't be long until he spawns his own adjective. 'Doylean'? Don't rule it out -- BENJAMIN MYERS, author of Cuddy
Curious, compassionate, filthy, iconoclastic . . .
Cameo is mindbending fun and Rob Doyle yet again underlines his legend * LISA McINERNEY *
Abject and gleeful,
Cameo refracts selfhood into a dazzle of authors writing characters, writing authors, writing at the edges of the real. By rattling the self until it splits, Doyle has penned a peeling, serpentine novel for an age of shed certainties -- THOMAS MCMULLAN, author of Groundwater
Where I come from, when something is called mad it's often a good thing. Rob Doyle's new novel is very mad * RODDY DOYLE *
It takes a truly exceptional writer to throw around a term as aggressively pretentious as 'quantum-auto-fiction', then have the gall to actually pull it off. Unlike anything I've ever read. A portrait of the artist from every conceivable angle * LIAS SAOUDI *
Impressively fast-paced,
Cameo asks timely questions about authorship and our responsibility for the stories we send out in the world * HOT PRESS MAGAZINE *
Cameo is a unique and hilarious novel . . . a meta commentary on novels that cannot exist, with a series of destabilising Russian doll chapters that both summarise the outrageous content of Ren Duka's novels while undermining notions of authorship and origin in a hilarious and genuinely subversive hall of mirrors. Through this, Duka becomes an emblematic man of history, engaging with all the major events of recent times, from climate protest to Chinese interference, from being captured by ISIS to being cancelled for misogyny, a dazzling performance that seeks to restore the experimental literary novel back to its subversive origins * JAMES MILLER *