Summary | Excerpt | Reviews | Beyond the book | Read-Alikes | Genres & Themes | Author Bio
The characters of The Rotters' Club—Jonathan Coe's nostalgic, humorous evocation of adolescent life in the 1970s—have bartered their innocence for the vengeance of middle age in a story that is very much of the moment, charged with such issues as 9/11 and the invasion of Iraq.
The characters of The Rotters' Club—Jonathan Coe's nostalgic, humorous evocation of adolescent
life in the 1970s—have bartered their innocence for the vengeance of middle age
in a story that is very much of the moment, charged with such issues as 9/11 and
the invasion of Iraq.
On New Year's Eve of 1999, with Tony Blair presiding over a glossy new version
of Britain, Benjamin Trotter watches the celebration on television in the same
Birmingham house where he'd grown up. Watches, in fact, his younger brother
Paul, now a member of Parliament and a rising star of New Labour, glad-handing
his way through the festive crowd at the Millennium Dome. Neither of them could
guess their lives are about to implode.
Paul begins an affair with his young assistant, soon realizes he has made the
fatal mistake of falling in love with her, then is threatened with exposure by
Doug Anderton, a journalist who happens to be one of his oldest schoolboy
enemies. At the same time, Benjamin and his friend Claire, still haunted by
memories almost thirty years old, make a desperate attempt to break free of the
past, if only to escape the notion that their happiest years are behind them.
As Cool Britannia is forced to address its ongoing racial and social
tensions—and as its role in America's "war on terrorism" grows increasingly
compromised—The Closed Circle shuttles between London and Birmingham,
where fat cats, politicos, media advisers, and protesters in both locales lay
bare an era when policy and PR have become indistinguishable. Meanwhile, its
rich cast of characters contends with startling revelations about their youth
and the pressing, perennial problems of love, vocation, and family.
Jumping forward 3 decades, Coe revisits the cast of his 2001 novel, The Rotters Club, all grown up. Life has been pretty good to a few of them, such as Paul Trotter, now a member of Blair's "New Labour" Party, but others have not done so well and some still carry the angst of their teen years. As before, Coe explores the connections and conflicts between individual decisions and society as a whole...continued
Full Review
(220 words)
This review is available to non-members for a limited time. For full access,
become a member today.
(Reviewed by BookBrowse Review Team).
Jonathan Coe
was born in Birmingham in 1961
and was educated at Trinity
College, Cambridge. He has
taught English Poetry at Warwick
and worked as a professional
musician, writing music for jazz
and cabaret.
He is the author of about 6
novels including
The Rotters' Club
(2001) which is set in
Birmingham during the 1970s and
tells the story of a group of
school friends working on the
school magazine. It was adapted
for BBC Television in 2005. He
is also the author of
...
This "beyond the book" feature is available to non-members for a limited time. Join today for full access.
If you liked The Closed Circle, try these:
by Greg Iles
Published 2006
'The job of great fiction is to entertain, elucidate and educate while keeping readers nailed to their chairs; this does all of that brilliantly.'
by Chris Cleave
Published 2006
A distraught woman writes a letter to Osama bin Laden after her four-year-old son and her husband are killed in a massive suicide bomb attack at a soccer match in London in this stunning first novel.
Music is the pleasure the human mind experiences from counting without being aware that it is counting
Click Here to find out who said this, as well as discovering other famous literary quotes!