'Those People' review: It's not a lovely day in the neighborhood

"Those People" is Louise Candlish's follow-up to "Our House." Credit: Washington Post News Service/Berkley
THOSE PEOPLE by Louise Candlish (Berkley, 352 pp., $26)
Last year British author Louise Candlish made her American debut with the domestic thriller "Our House." Nw she returns with a mordant tale called "Those People." She could well have titled it "Our Houses," since the plot finds several homes and their owners threatened by obnoxious newcomers.
The offending two are Darren Booth and his girlfriend, Jodie. They've moved into a semi-detached home that Darren inherited in Lowland Way, an upscale suburb of London. A neighbor complains that the couple is turning their property into "a disaster zone." There's "a mountain of bricks and rubble," along with a van and two cars, one of them jacked up and blocking the sidewalk. The sounds coming from inside the house of blaring rock music and a blasting drill jar everyone on the street.
Darren and Jodie appear to be the titular "those people," the ones everyone on the block point to angrily. But Candlish complicates things: It's hard to tell who are the victims and who are the perpetrators. "Those people" could just as well be "these people."
Fueled by fears the squalor will send property values plummeting (a B&B across from Darren has already shuttered), the neighbors resort to violence against Darren and Jodie. Ant, who, with his wife Em, shares the Booth's semi-detached property, pitches a terra-cotta pot onto the Booth's yard.
Then one night a scaffold Darren had erected over the front of his house collapses and kills one of the characters. Did someone on the street sabotage the structure?
Moving from house to house, Candlish exposes the smug, hypocritical, selfish attitudes of their owners. The folks along Lowland Way are about as nasty, as hypocritical and, eventually, as violent as the predatory villagers in Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery." An ironic and poignant coda suggests at least one person on the street possesses a few grams of humanity. Otherwise, Lowland Way — as its name suggests — is a dispiriting place.
Most Popular
Top Stories

