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  1. Dec 24, 2010 · A copy of “Ulysses” pops up in “Green Coaster,” the 33-page, single-sentence section that closes Jonathan Coe’s brilliant novel “The RottersClub” (2001).

  2. The Rotters' Club is a 2001 novel by British author Jonathan Coe. [1] [2] It is set in Birmingham during the 1970s, and inspired by the author's experiences at King Edward's School, Birmingham. The title is taken from the album The Rotters' Club by experimental rock band Hatfield and the North. [3] The book was followed by two sequels.

    • Jonathan Coe
    • UK
    • 2001
    • English
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  4. Jonathan Coe's 2001 novel The Rotters' Club has a sentence with 13,955 words It was inspired by Bohumil Hrabal's Dancing Lessons for the Advanced in Age: a Czech language novel written in one long sentence. Solar Bones by Mike McCormack is written as one sentence It won the 2016 Goldsmith's prize for experimental fiction, was longlisted for the ...

  5. Feb 22, 2001 · The RottersClub is a novel about England in the 70s; under the shadow of the IRA, the miners’ strike and power cuts, socialists and far right populists, youth school rivalries within an environment of a “malign, inexorable divisiveness” and teenage angst, blue and white collars and social class differences and music, music, MUSIC ...

    • (14.4K)
    • Paperback
  6. The main characters are Ben Trotter, Claire Newman, Doug Anderton, and Philip Chase. The Rotters' Club contains a sentence that is 13,955 words long. This is longer than Molly's soliloquy in Ulysses (1920). 1. Peter Bradshaw, 'Boys Will be Boys,' The Guardian (2001). 2.

  7. Summary. PDF Cite Share. Jonathan Coe’s novel centers on the lives of a group of classmates at a tony school in Birmingham, England, and though the attention shifts among the different teenagers ...

  8. Jul 24, 2021 · I never got very far with that book, but when I began writing The RottersClub in 1997 I suppose I was in some sense resuming the project I’d begun 20 years earlier. In the meantime, however ...

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