'The Proof of My Innocence' by Jonathan Coe
13 December 2024
Jonathan Coe is one of my favourite writers and I particularly enjoy his novels that set fictional events against the backdrop of recent British Politics - from the Thatcher Government of the 1980s (in 'What a Carve Up!') to New Labour (in 'The Closed Circle') to Cameron's Coalition Government (in 'Number 11’, reviewed here in January 2016) to Brexit (in 'Middle England', reviewed here in January 2019). His latest book, 'The Proof of My Innocence', which I have just finished reading (as an unabridged audio book, narrated by Sam Woolf, Alana Maria, Charlotte Worthing, Mark Stobbart and Roy McMillan) is set during Liz Truss's 49-day tenure as Prime Minister. While it does explore the Conservative Party's lurch to the right, 'The Proof of My Innocence' is also a murder mystery, with Coe parodying the current trend of 'cosy crime' novels (much like Kate Atkinson did in her recent Jackson Brodie novel 'Death at the Sign of the Rook', reviewed here in October 2024). But overall it's a novel about writing, where nothing is quite what it first seems (even the title has a double meaning). Much like David Lodge's 'Therapy' this is a novel where it pays to think about who is telling each section of the story. Like David Lodge, Jonathan Coe writes accessible, entertaining prose that is much cleverer than it first appears. 'The Proof of My Innocence' is not his funniest work but it is a very enjoyable and satisfying puzzle.
Labels: Books
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