Richard Foster's first book, Flower Factory, was novel-ish, but also a personal memoir and a bit of a documentary-in-print about 'foreign' seasonal workers at the 'bulb factories' (flower bulbs) in the Dutch 'Bollenstreek' around 2000. I loved it, especially because Foster is good at making the ordinary somewhat magical. I never thought of 'that time and place' as special, but he made it special.
The Punk Rock Birdwatching Club is not a novel but a collection of short stories, but it can easily be seen as a sequel: same feel, same area, same culture, but it is set a few years later, after the arrival of the euro (and the Poles, and the Romanians), as things are starting to change in The Netherlands and Europe - and Foster's generation moves on.
Foster tells stories about his pubs and hang-outs in downtown Leiden (the music venues, the squats), but he also moves out into the surrounding area, towns and villages, painting a vivid picture of that specific part of The Netherlands around 2004 or so. He really understands the country and culture.
My favorite story here is probably 'Gezellig', in which the author finds himself at what we call a 'kringverjaardag', a birthday party where a large, working-class Dutch family basically just sits on chairs, placed in a large circle in the living room. The dialogue, the snacks, the characters... it's absolutely spot-on, extremely funny, but not because Foster is making fun of it. He describes the whole awkward affair with so much love and compassion that it actually moved me.
Another favorite would be the final story, 'A Slip in Times Saves Nine', in which the author goes back to the old bulb factory where he used to work twenty years earlier: it's abandoned, covered with rust and moss, as the author reflects on his days as a factory worker, making that ordinary place so magical that you start to wonder if the old colleagues they meet around the factory are actually there. They might as well be ghosts, just memories. It's beautifully done.
To me, as a Dutchman, it all feels familiar and recent, but Foster makes me realize how fundamentally it all has changed.