Saturday, 29 September 2018

The Couple Next Door by Shari Lapena


The stuff of every parent’s nightmare, successful couple Anne and Marco face the trauma of their baby being taken from their home. What’s worse, they feel themselves to blame, since they were next door at a dinner party when it happened, albeit with baby monitor and return trips every half hour. As time wears on they begin to blame each other, and wonder who is actually telling the truth. There are secrets and lies, and detective Rasbach is determined to uncover them. 
The trouble for me really is that the narrative has a very curious style. The joy of a psychological thriller is usually that you are firmly in one character’s head, and wrong-footed at all turns, never sure who to believe… if you do enter another character’s head, it is usually another chapter. But this present-tense narrative hops from head to head, so that in the space of a few paragraphs, we whizz from Anne to Marco to Detective Rasbach, which dissipates the tension and means for me it was very hard to truly feel for any of the main characters. We know nothing about detective Rasbach at all, which is unusual in current crime fiction, where the detective is often as much a main character as anyone. 
Still, I pressed on and did get more drawn in, mostly wanting to know whether the baby survives, and after all the book is a bestseller… 
Has anyone else read this and absolutely loved it?