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Ross O'Carroll-Kelly #14

Keeping Up with the Kalashnikovs

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My friend, Fionn, was being held hostage in, I don't know, Unganga Nanga, and the Government was refusing to send in a team of marines to extract him. Pack of focking cauliflower worriers ... I wouldn't have minded being bound and gagged in a basement - just for some peace and quiet. My wife was up the spout again. My daughter had grown into a mix between Suri Cruise and a Chucky doll. And one or two other chickens - well, birds - were coming home to roost. Suddenly, I realized what I had to do - go and get Fionn back. Except what I didn't realize was that Unganga Nanga was no country for old tens.

400 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2014

21 people are currently reading
120 people want to read

About the author

Ross O'Carroll-Kelly

39 books165 followers
Pseudonym for journalist Paul Howard.

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5 stars
220 (42%)
4 stars
189 (36%)
3 stars
81 (15%)
2 stars
21 (4%)
1 star
3 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews
Profile Image for David Brady.
7 reviews
April 18, 2015
I wonder did Paul Howard write this episode before the whole hostage-extremist issue became so grim. Three stars only I'm afraid - I love this series (and have read them all) but Kalashnikovs is really two or three books rolled into one, and the gags not quite funny as the other books.
Profile Image for Sarah Mcgrath.
699 reviews1 follower
September 16, 2014
I think the series is finally getting stale. Very few laugh out loud moments in this one.
Profile Image for Ian.
42 reviews
April 2, 2015
Quite good but nowhere nears the heights of the other books. Maybe time is running out for Rosser
Profile Image for Margaret Madden.
755 reviews173 followers
July 25, 2015
Review from BleachhouseLibrary.Blogspot.ie

We received a copy of this title from the publisher, in return for an honest review.



“Keeping up with the Kalashnikovs” is the latest novel in the highly popular Ross O’Carroll-Kelly series . Fans of his weekly column in “The Irish Times” might be surprised to know that this is actually the fourteenth novel in the series .

This story revolves around the kidnapping in Uganda of Ross’ nerdish friend and former school team mate , Fionn , and the attempts of Ross to rescue him . Before that can be achieved Ross must deal with a number of more pressing issues closer to home . His long-suffering wife Sorcha is pregnant with triplets,his mother is dabbling in illicit substances and his eight year old daughter is up to no good . As Ross says “ Life in Killiney has become a nerve-shredding plate-spinning act” In addition to these , Ross manages to involve himself in the relationship woes of his great friends Oisin,JP and Christian !

The Ross O’Carroll-Kelly series has been a fantastic success over the years as people follow his story with regularity and dedication. I am a fan of this character, and the series, so looked forward to this latest book. It was a little darker then previous titles, with the pirate element, but had plenty of laugh out loud moments and was full of Ross' usual humour.

Regular readers of the series are bound to enjoy the many moments of hilarity and cringe that ensue in this episode and I am sure there is more of Ross to come .

Review by Declan Madden
Profile Image for Julia.
521 reviews3 followers
January 4, 2015
I love me some Ross and was squeeing to have two to get through, but though I enjoyed this I kept being kept comparing this to Downturn and going - eh. I think its because of the Africa plotline and focussing more on the goys than his family (OMG, he slept with someone close to one of them again, do you think they'll forgive him this time?) but even though I still love the characters and the jokes etc, it felt a bit shark-jumpy this time. I felt that the illustrator gave Howard some wacky pics to begin with and then he worked out how to fit the plot around them than other way round.
Profile Image for Judy M Reyes.
96 reviews41 followers
January 13, 2023
I have a problem...I will try to finish books that I start reading, even if I start disliking them. That was the case here with Keeping up with the Kalashnikovs. I finished it. The End.
I picked up this book in 2015 in a bookstore during a trip to Galway, Ireland. So I finally got to it and tried to give it a chance. Perhaps the times have changed, given "Me Too." But although I LOVE satire, black humor, irreverence and irony (all of which I believe this book proports to contain), I found it quite indulgent. Let's just say that it is written from the Male Protagonist perspective, and was not particularly positive about the females in his life. It could be seen as a bawdy romp, written with Irish-English spelling, but "Ross" is just a bit too creepy and gets away with it all. Women are shrews, pathetic losers or sexual targets. Ross is "the boss" of it all. The one thing I'll say positive is that he has a demon-child daughter "Honor" with a smart mouth and chutzpah beyond the pale. Eventually I saw that "Honor" grew a bit throughout the saga, and father/daughter relationship improved by the end of the book. So Honor could be someone that I might like to see again somewhere in a book. She was the true "evil genius" of the story.
Profile Image for Wes.
513 reviews5 followers
March 28, 2019
Book fourteen in the Ross O'Carroll-Kelly series. Ross and the gang are kidnapped in Uganda trying to rescue Fionn who had been kidnapped in Uganda. All the usual supporting characters get an outing. I think this series has really taken off since they increased the page count from 250 to 400 . Paul Howard gets the extra freedom to explore the characters in much greater detail, ok it may slow the pace a bit but makes up for it with the extra dimensions to the characters
Profile Image for Paul Singleton.
Author 1 book2 followers
January 30, 2021
Absolutely brilliant read as ever. What always amazes me is the ease with which Paul Howard writes dialogue and creates a page-turning story all through the eyes of one narcissistic character who you nearly always end up liking as he saves the day yet again. This book is no exception. I only wish I could write dialogue as cleverly. A true art form.
4 reviews
May 18, 2018
Excellent

I enjoyed this book so very much. I laughed my head off but it was also touching in parts. I know Ross so well now I don't want anything bad to happen to him but he really has NO moral compass!
Profile Image for Matthew Harwood.
957 reviews3 followers
March 13, 2025
A unique and novel addition to a hilarious series. The characters are lovable and the situations that they get themselves into are hilarious and written enjoyably. It is hard to put this book down and I found myself laughing out loud throughout.
Profile Image for Kevin.
152 reviews1 follower
August 12, 2020
My first ROCK book. Hooked from the start, and reading every book in the series since
Profile Image for Sharyn Hayden.
Author 3 books2 followers
April 28, 2024
I haven't ever met a Ross O'Carroll Kelly book I didn't like. Another smash hit.
7 reviews
September 3, 2022
I recently heard an author of a really successful thriller series say, "What the reader of series wants is something the same that's different".
And Keeping Up with the Kalasnikovs does just that, we have the same lovable rogue getting himself into strife that only he could, but we have it with new settings, some new characters and new laughs. All in all, it's what we've come to love and expect from Ross O Carroll-Kelly. If you liked some of the other novels or even just the newspaper column, you'll love Keeping Up with the Kalasnikovs.
Profile Image for Grace Tierney.
Author 5 books22 followers
September 21, 2014
Another legend of a novel about the man who could have been Brian ODriscoll if only he were smarter and less of a hit with the ladies. Great modern Irish satire and a page turner as always. This time he needs to rescue his friend Fionn from kidnappers in Uganda while stopping his wife finding Honor's rat-breeding operation, becoming a father again and juggling a few lady-friends too. Great read. Not sure how well non-Irish residents would cope with the accents, but anybody trying to understand modern Ireland would do well to read the series, and don't take it too seriously.
37 reviews
September 21, 2015
Ross returns to some of his old antics in this book, and I start to wonder if any of the lessons learned by Ross are actually going to stick or if he's forever going to ebb and flow in and out of maturity. None the less, it was a good Ross book, and we haven't had an adventure like the last third of this book in a long, long time.

Interestingly the book ends .
Profile Image for Rebecca.
35 reviews1 follower
September 13, 2014
We received book into work for review. This is an excellent addition to the Ross O'Carroll-Kelly series. As a character Ross truly is side splitting funny at times, while at others I wanted to delve into the book and throttle him.
More...more....
Profile Image for Naoise.
66 reviews6 followers
December 18, 2015
This story dragged a bit and the phonetically written dialogue and accents are hard to decipher at times but once the story actually got going it was incredibly funny. I'd really give it 3 and a half stars.
3 reviews
September 30, 2014
Enjoyable Ross story, was ideal for my late summer holiday, he finally realises that the apple doesn't fall far from the tree with his daughter Honor!
Profile Image for Brid Molloy.
6 reviews1 follower
Read
January 7, 2015
Funny. Howard's ability to convey all sorts of dialect is genius and hilarious. Love this series Roysh!
Profile Image for Julia.
63 reviews
May 11, 2015
Definitely not one of my favourites of the series.
79 reviews
January 5, 2016
Three and a half. Good story, funny and some sharp observations of modern Ireland. But Ross is just too bad, too amoral.
Displaying 1 - 25 of 25 reviews

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