THE CLOSED CIRCLE
Material type:
- 9780241967720
- F/COE
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Jaffna | F/COE |
Available
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JA00003734 |
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Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
On Millennium night, with Blair presiding over a superficially cool, sexed-up new version of the country, Benjamin Trotter finds himself watching the celebrations on his parents' TV. Watching, in fact, his younger brother, Paul, now a bright young New Labour MP who has bought wholeheartedly into the Blairite dream. Neither of them can know that their lives are about to implode.
Set against the backdrop of a changing Britain and the country's increasingly compromised role in America's 'war against terrorism', the characters struggle to make sense of the perennial problems of love, vocation and family.
Excerpt provided by Syndetics
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
Welcome back to the characters we first encountered in Coe's The Rotter's Club, set at the dawn of the Thatcher years, who now find themselves in discontented middle age. Much like Benjamin Trotter, who has spent his adult years toiling away at a novel based on his own life against the backdrop of the political events of the day, so Coe's story places these characters in the context of the high hopes for the new Labour government, the climate of fear that followed the events of 9/11, and the gradual disillusionment with British Prime Minister Tony Blair after the invasion of Iraq. Benjamin's angst over a childless marriage and unsatisfactory career reaches the crisis point after he finds himself drawn to a young grad student. Events conspire against him as she becomes involved with his brother, a rising star in the Blair government. Their budding relationship attracts the notice of an old schoolmate, now a journalist looking for a scoop that will save his foundering career. This politically incisive sequel may be read and enjoyed independently, but fans of the earlier novel will be rewarded by the welcome return of an engaging cast of characters and the resolution of outstanding mysteries. Highly recommended.-Barbara Love, Kingston Frontenac P.L., Kingston, Ont. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Review
The Rotters' Club (2002), Coe's witty novel of teenage schoolmates growing up in 1970s Birmingham, England, introduced an expansive cast of characters. With echoes of Anthony Trollope and Anthony Powell, this wonderful, compulsively readable sequel explores the adults those young people became-it opens in 1999 and closes in 2003-and paints a satirical but moving portrait of life at the turn of the century. Claire Newman still mourns her sister, who vanished without a trace in The Rotters' Club. Benjamin Trotter still mourns his one true (teenage) love. His brother, Paul, is an ambitious member of Parliament in "Blair's Brave New Britain." Doug Anderton and Philip Chase became journalists, and the first book's other characters all reappear in some way or another (along with flashbacks to many of their teenage escapades). Coe cleverly works real events into the plot-London's Millennium Eve, the possible shutdown of a British auto manufacturer, the war in Iraq. The theme, as in The Rotters' Club, concerns the conflicts and connections between individual decisions and societal events, but while Coe's political sensibility is readily apparent, this novel, with its incredibly well developed characters and its immensely engaging narrative, is no polemical tract. It's a compelling, dramatic and often funny depiction of the way we live now-both savage and heartfelt at the same time. (May 31) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reservedBooklist Review
In this extremely readable sequel to The Rotters' Club 0 (2001), which was set in the 1970s, the circle of British teenagers is now teetering on the brink of middle age and struggling with infidelity and failed ambition. Benjamin Trotter is an accountant who has been working for decades on a novel that runs to thousands of pages and is to be accompanied by his own music; he is a victim of self-doubt and a paralyzing obsession with his first love. He becomes infatuated with young Malvina, who falls hard for Benjamin's brother, Paul, a rising political star. Coe interweaves the personal with the political as key developments over the past four years run continually in the background--the threatened closure of the Rover car factory, England's role in the war on terrorism. Often-biting cultural commentary on, for example, cell phones and SUVs serves to lighten the mood. Coe's narrative voice is pleasingly intimate, as though he were inviting his readers into the "closed circle" referenced in the title, urging them to lean close and then closer. --Joanne Wilkinson Copyright 2005 BooklistKirkus Book Review
Benjamin Trotter, his friends and family return, even more at sea in a transformed Britain than they were 20 years ago at the close of The Rotters' Club (2002). The sharp eye for the socioeconomic landscape that distinguished Coe's previous outing is also quickly evident here, as Claire Newman describes London in December 1999: "There are vast numbers of people who don't work in this city anymore, in the sense of making things or selling things. All that seems to be considered rather old-fashioned." Claire has returned after years living in Italy, but her school chum Benjamin is just as bemused back in their hometown, Birmingham, where he's senior partner in an accounting firm, still working on the novel that was supposed to make his name decades ago and still mooning over Cicely Boyd, though he's been married to long-suffering Emily for years. Benjamin may have retained the socialist values of their parents, but he's just as self-absorbed as younger brother Paul, an eager-beaver junior member of Tony Blair's business-friendly New Labor government. Both men are fascinated by a young woman named Malvina, who becomes Paul's "media advisor" and later his lover before a heavily foreshadowed revelation about her parentage provides the story's climax. There are several other flamboyant plot twists involving members of the once-close, now slightly ill-at-ease circle of friends that also includes journalists Doug Anderton (by this time married to an aristocrat) and Philip Chase (Claire's ex). But the real point here is Coe's acid, bitingly funny portrait of early-21st century Britain, where the cradle-to-grave welfare state has been abandoned as "a now comically outdated democratic ideal" and cab drivers knowledgably discuss varieties of wine ("Australian Shiraz, you know, something fruity and mellow"). His characters never come quite as vividly to life, though they're generally decent, intelligent, well-meaning people with believable personalities and problems. A pleasing modern-day addition to the venerable lineage of the English social novel, easily the equal of Trollope or Galsworthy, though without the imaginative fire of Dickens. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.
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