Author forcefully builds the tension in ‘Those People’
Author forcefully builds the tension in ‘Those People’
“Those People” (Berkley), by Louise Candlish
Oh, those people – those boorish, inconsiderate people who move into a nice quiet neighborhood and have no respect for those who live there or the camaraderie built up through the years. Those people play their music – thrash metal, no less – at top levels all hours of the night when their TV isn’t blaring, while doing loud construction work round the clock.
It’s enough to make peaceful, rational people contemplate murder as they do in Louise Candlish’s highly entertaining “Those People.”
London’s Lowland Way is more than a lovely, serene place to live. It’s nearly idyllic and fodder for newspaper features. The residents here watch out for each other, mind everyone’s children and dogs, and are courteous of their differences. They take pride in their homes. The neighborhood even won an award for its “Play Out Sunday” program in which the street is closed so children can safely play.
Ralph Morgan and his wife, Naomi, are the neighborhood leaders. His brother, Finn, and his wife, Tessa, live next door. Across the street is Sissy Watkins, who runs a quiet bed and breakfast while nearby are Anthony “Ant” Kendall, his wife, Em, and their baby, Sam. Then Darren Booth and his partner, Jodie, move in, upending the neighborhood with their thoughtlessness, even operating an illegal used car sales lot in this residential area.
Domestic thrillers have emerged as one of the hottest trends in the mystery genre and, as she did in her debut “Our House,” Candlish knows how to turn everyday situations sinister.
Associated Press