One of Us by Elizabeth Day review – the inner lives of Tory MPs
<p>Driven by a whodunnit-ish plot, this state-of-the-nation sequel to The Party features a family at the centre of British political life</p><p>Elizabeth Day is the right person to write a state-of-the-nation novel about our society at a point when so many are convinced it’s failing. She herself has made a successful franchise out of failure with her How to Fail podcast. She understands failure and she understands that it may be too tempting to luxuriate in it, rather than seeing how quickly it can turn into success and back again.</p><p>Day began her career with thoughtful, intimate novels about the fault lines of family life. <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2011/jan/15/scissors-paper-elizabeth-day-review">Scissors, Paper, Stone</a> and <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2013/mar/14/home-fires-elizabeth-day-review">Home Fires</a> were old-fashioned, heartfelt works about how cruelty trickles down the generations and how lives can be tentatively remade. Then she more ambitiously embraced the thriller genre on the one hand and a larger social canvas on the other. This has presented dangers: her last novel, <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/sep/30/magpie-by-elizabeth-day-review-a-clever-thriller-about-baby-hunger">Magpie</a>, risked sacrificing characterisation altogether for the sake of a grand midway reveal; before that, <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2017/jul/14/the-party-elizabeth-day-review-fiction">The Party</a> was so plot-driven and backstory-laden that it lacked the fine-grained intimacy of her earlier works. One of Us is a sequel to The Party, but it’s a much stronger, more distinctive novel, better read as a standalone work. Here she has returned to the intimate family dynamics at which she excels, combined with a brilliantly propulsive, almost whodunnit-ish plot and an
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The Guardian