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The Rotters' Club
The Rotters' Club
Dec 4, 2025 11:21 PM

Author:Jonathan Coe

The Rotters' Club

The first in The Rotters' Club series, bestselling author Jonathan Coe's iconic tale of Benjamin Trotter is a hilarious, heartfelt celebration of the joys and agonies of growing up

WINNER OF THE EVERYMAN WODEHOUSE PRIZE

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Birmingham, England, c. 1973: industrial strikes, bad pop music, first love, corrosive class warfare, detention, IRA bombings.

Four friends: a class clown who stoops very low for a laugh; a confused artist enthralled by rock; an earnest radical with socialist leanings; and a quiet dreamer obsessed with poetry, God, and the prettiest girl in school.

Unforgettably funny and painfully honest, The Rotters' Club is perfect for readers of Nick Hornby and William Boyd - or anyone who ever experience adolescence the hard way!

THE STORY CONTINUES IN THE CLOSED CIRCLE AND MIDDLE ENGLAND.

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'One of those sweeping, ambitious yet hugely readable, moving and richly comic novels . . . a masterpiece' Daily Telegraph

'Very funny . . . Coe had achieved that rare feat: a novel stuffed with characters you really care for' The Times

'A book to cherish, a book to reread, a book to buy for all your friends' Independent on Sunday

Written with his signature wit, Jonathan Coe's unmissable new novel, Bournville, is available to pre-order now!

Reviews

A superb creation, exploding with cheerful chauvinism and black Celtic humour... You finish the book, hungry for more

—— The Times

While recognising that we have all sat po-faced through novels which other people have assured us are hilarious... all I can say is that The Snapper creased me up

—— Guardian

Not since I first delved into Flann O'Brian have I so consistently laughed out loud while reading a book

—— Sunday Tribune

Mankell is the master. Let’s be honest: I hate thrillers. But I love Mankell

—— Viv Groskop , Red Magazine

Profound and compelling… Paints a convincing and poignant picture

—— Good Book Guide

Intriguing

—— Tina Moran , Daily Express

A gripping page turner

—— O, The Oprah Magazine

Entrancing

—— Christopher Hirst , Independent

An ironic anti-novel about the novel: it poses serious questions about the form’s limitations in being able to capture the protean reality of memory and identity but also argues for its continuing relevance (taking its cue from writers like Barthes, Perec and Queneau who appear in its pages) as a post-modernist game of ideas, a thought-provoking jeu d’esprit.

—— Oliver Dixon , Nudge

Everyone knows someone with an encyclopaedic knowledge of pop or Radio One’s back catalogue. So if you’re fed up of second-guessing which albums are missing from their collection, but want a more personal gift than just another iTunes voucher, try John Niven’s satirical look at the music industry. Recently adapted for film, this is a hard and fast story based within the cutthroat music industry. Give this book as a gift and you’re sure to have any muso singing your praises.

—— Marie Claire

The novel is rich in sentiment and episodes conveying sentiment.

—— Philip Marchand , National Post

Smart, sly, raucous, outrageous and tender The Guts will have you cheering for Jimmy and his family and if you’re not already a fan of Doyle’s writing will surely make you one.

—— Janet Somerville

The biggest joy is Doyle's deftness with dialogue.

—— Sue Conley , Herald.ie

In The Guts, Doyle returns once more to those themes he has always written about so singularly: love and family. Doyle has never written anything that is not about love and its transformational power.

—— Gabriel Byrne , Irish Times

A big-hearted novel of family life in which bad things ultimately happen to other people.

—— Anthony Cummins , Metro

As ever with Doyle, there’s wit, warmth and exuberant swearing found in even the toughest of situations.

—— Sport

Jimmy Rabbitte is 47 and potentially facing death, but ready to have a good time before doing it.

—— Sunday Business Post

What it has…is a melancholy wisdom, and some moments of heartbreaking poignancy.

—— Katy Guest , Independent on Sunday

Doyle conjures up a genuine tenderness, empathy and humanity when he writes about family life.

—— JP O'Malley , Observer

A warm, rude and occasionally tender novel about friendship, family and facing death.

—— Olaf Tyaransan , Hot Press

This is a bitter-sweet novel: a state-of-the-nation, state-of-the-age recession appraisal, and a loving portrayal of an imperfect, foul-mouthed, unstoppable, loving and lovable old bastard… [Doyle] packs more emotion into a simple ‘yeah’, or an ‘I know’ than many writers do into entire poetic speeches.

—— Bookmunch

Think it's clear from The Guts that Roddy Doyle has written this one from the guts: it's frank and funny, it's about things that matter (love and family and friendship), and it crackles with feisty Dublin dialect and richly comic exchanges.

—— Reading Matters

Warm, funny novel.

—— Sunday World

Lachyrymachismo. The art of being weepy and tough at the same time. This book has it in spades. Or rather buckets.

—— Private Eye

The great thing about Roddy Doyle is his ear for the demotic… The Guts is a good read.

—— Melanie McDonagh , Evening Standard

Doyle explores post-boom Ireland with gusto.

—— Claire Coughlan , Sunday Independent, Ireland

Unsurprisingly, every bit as good as the original [The Commitments], Doyle is one of those rare writers who never disappoints

—— Socialist Unity

Wise, wistful and poignant.

—— Sebastian Shakespeare , Tatler

Bittersweet.

—— Justine Taylor , Guardian Online

Long-awaited sequel.

—— Mark Perryman , Huffington Post

Doyle’s ear for dialogue is as acute as ever and there’s a lot of amusing asides about contemporary life in this revisiting of much-loved characters.

—— Irish Independent

A book full of Doyle's dark humour mixed with melancholy and wonderful moments of sheer madness.

—— Good Book Guide

The feat of The Guts is Doyle’s ability to create in Jimmy a character who hangs together even while so many of his certainties have collapsed. And to get a few good jokes in as well.

—— Mark Athitakis , Washington Post
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