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The Club

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"Wildly entertaining . . . as it unfolds, brutal truths about class and gender and violence emerge, take hold and shudder through the novel's final pages." —Megan Abbott, national bestselling author
As a boy, Hans Stichler enjoys a fable-like childhood among the rolling hills and forests of North Germany, living an idyll that seems uninterruptable—until two disasters change his life forever. He falls into the guardianship of his eccentric English aunt Alex, who invites him to come to university at Cambridge, where she teaches art history.
Alex will ensure his application to St. John's College is accepted, but in return Hans must help her investigate a secretive Cambridge institution known as the Pitt Club. The Club has existed at Cambridge for centuries, its long legacy of tradition, privilege, and decadence largely unquestioned. As Hans makes his best efforts to prove Club material, including training for the university boxing team, he is drawn into a glamorous world of debauchery and macho solidarity. And when he falls in love with fellow student Charlotte, the stakes of his deception are raised. For there are dark secrets in the Club's history, as well as in its present—and Hans soon finds himself in the inner sanctum of a dangerous institution, forced to grapple with the notion that sometimes one must do wrong to do right.
"The Club starts out as a poignant coming-of-age tale and then morphs into an intelligent, fast-paced thriller that scrutinizes class divides and gender imbalance." —Minneapolis Star Tribune
"A timely, beautifully paced novel about class and prestige in the #MeToo era." —Booklist
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    • Library Journal

      December 1, 2018

      Debut Losing his mother and father in quick succession, Hans also loses his idyllic childhood in leafy Lower Saxony as he comes under the guardianship of his aunt Alex, his mother's half-sister and a crisp Cambridge scholar. She quickly dispatches him to a Jesuit boarding school, where he perfects his boxing skills, and later compels him to attend St. John's College, Cambridge, with a plan of her own. Though she won't say why, she wants Hans to gain entrance to the elite Pitt Club and ingratiate himself with its boxers. To that end, she introduces him to another student, Charlotte, who in turn introduces him to her wealthy, drenched-in-class father, a Pitt boxer of old. As unassuming Hans pursues his task, he falls for Charlotte and learns a terrible secret that won't surprise even as it shatters. VERDICT Distinguished German journalist Würger, who broke some bones boxing for a year at Cambridge, offers a powerful and provoking story.

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2019
      A young man infiltrates a secret university club and discovers a dangerous secret.German journalist Würger's debut novel begins with his protagonist, Hans, describing his idyllic childhood: "When I think back to the earliest years of my life it is always late summer." A soft and curious boy, Hans lives with his parents in their home in a forest--a happy arrangement that ends quite suddenly. Years later, Hans--who is starved for friendship and family--receives an invitation from his aunt to attend St. John's College, Cambridge. The offer comes with strings attached: Hans will have to investigate the Pitt Club, one of the oldest institutions on campus. The club is full of rich, privileged young men well-versed in secrets, debauchery, and something far more sinister. Aided by Charlotte, a fellow student, Hans is introduced into the world of the elite. Comprised of many different voices, the novel feels Greek chorus-esque. Some points of view only appear once (i.e., a shopkeeper's) but others run through the entirety of the novel (i.e, that of Josh, an angry, toxic Pitt Club member who adores Hans). Made up of mostly short, uncomplicated sentences, the writing is also overwhelmingly evocative at times: "I told them how oranges tasted of adventure, and how the soft hair at the nape of girls' necks sometimes looked like candyfloss." While the crime at the novel's center is not surprising, it serves as a catalyst for Würger's interesting ruminations on class, violence, power, wealth, and masculinity. Many of these themes are also explored through boxing as Hans tries out for the university's team. Boxing runs through the novel like a heartbeat--revealing the dangers of violent masculine camaraderie with every scene. The novel's complicated ending touches on the problems of justice and redemption: who gets it, who deserves it, and its human cost.A sparse, cutting debut in which violence begets violence begets healing.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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