The Unfortunates

The Unfortunates

First UK edition
Author B.S. Johnson
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Publisher Panther Books (UK)
Secker & Warburg (US)
Publication date
1969
Media type Paperback (27 unbound sections in laminated box)
Pages 244 pages
OCLC 40588291

The Unfortunates is an experimental "book in a box" published in 1969 by English author B. S. Johnson and reissued in 2008 by New Directions.[1] The 27 sections are unbound, with a first and last chapter specified. The 25 sections in-between, ranging from a single paragraph to 12 pages in length, are designed to be read in any order.[1] Christopher Fowler described it as "a fairly straightforward meditation on death and friendship, told through memories."[2] Jonathan Coe described it as "one of the lost masterpieces of the sixties".[3]

Johnson said of the book "I did not think then, and do not think now, that this solved the problem completely… But I continue to believe that my solution was nearer; and even if it was only marginally nearer, then it was still a better solution to the problem of conveying the mind’s randomness than the imposed order of a bound book."[4][5]

Plot

A sportswriter is sent to a city (identifiable through landmarks as Nottingham) on an assignment, only to find himself confronted by ghosts from his past. As he attempts to report an association football match, memories of his friend, a tragic victim of cancer, haunt his mind.

The city visited remains unnamed, however the novel contains an accurate description of Nottingham landmarks, its streetscape, and its environment in 1969, with additional recallings of 1959. The football ground in the novel is obviously Nottingham Forest's City Ground, from whence the fictional football club 'City' comes.

References

  1. 1 2 Charles Taylor (22 August 2008). "Piece This One Together". The New York Times.
  2. Christopher Fowler (18 October 2009). "Forgotten authors No.40: BS Johnson". The Independent.
  3. Jonathan Coe (28 May 1997). "I wish I'd written:". The Guardian.
  4. "Introduction". Aren't You Rather Young to be Writing Your Memoirs?. Hutchinson. 1973. ISBN 978-0091181413.
  5. Jonathan Coe (17 October 2002). "Death by Naturalism". Jonathan Coe.
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