Become a Member
Books

Review: The Faithful Couple

Decades of double trouble

March 5, 2015 14:53
A D Miller: sharp observation of class differences and tangled emotions

By

Hephzibah Anderson

2 min read

By AD Miller
Little, Brown, £16.99

AD Miller's first book, The Earl of Petticoat Lane, was a shmatte-to-riches family memoir, charting his grandfather's rise via the knickers business from barrow-boy to society ball-goer. It was followed five years later by a novel, Snowdrops, which drew readers into a thriller-like story of seduction and corruption in contemporary Russia, winning a place on the 2011 Man Booker Prize shortlist. Now comes a third book and it's equally unexpected, equally assured.

A bromance at heart, The Faithful Couple spans almost 20 years in the lives of two young men, Neil and Adam. They're not the duo of the title, however - that name belongs to a pair of towering trees that have grown so close together, fighting for space and sunlight in Yosemite's Mariposa Grove, that their trunks have fused at the base. In this "rivalrous embrace" they loom presciently in the background of one of the earliest photos of Neil and Adam, taken a week or so after they meet in a hostel in San Diego.

Floppy-haired and privately educated, Home Counties Adam has just graduated; motherless Neil, a year ahead, has been working as a pharmaceuticals salesman and living with his dad in Harrow. They're a decidedly odd couple - "like a whim of evolution, a platypus or an anteater" - and their fidelity to this unexpected friendship will be sorely tested as careers and relationships evolve, buffeted by external forces like the dotcom bubble, the London Tube bombings and the Great Recession. Yet it's something that happens at the very start, just a few hours after that photo is taken, that will ultimately derail them.

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.