A review by literarycrushes
Double Blind by Edward St Aubyn

4.0

Double Blind by Edward St. Aubyn is an ambitious, current issue-driven novel. The novel is relatively slim considering the wide range of topics it managed to cover, from climate change to physical and mental illnesses, to parenthood and the confines of monogamy. The novel is set, as is typical of St. Aubyn’s books, within the delicious world of the British intellectual upper class. In my opinion, St. Aubyn parodies this specific yet widely covered class of people just as well as any of the greatest classical authors. His subtle digs and metaphors are brilliant, and I found myself rereading sentences over and over to capture their full meaning. (One of my favorites: Seeing them was like watching someone you love climb aboard the wrong train and then having to run down the platform trying to warn them of their mistake as the train draws of our the station.)
I could easily see this novel following in the footsteps of his Patrick Melrose series as I felt the book ended rather abruptly and left a lot of loose ends not quite tied up. This book was ambitious as could have easily turned out as a dizzying, fumbled collage of hot button issues in the hands of a less talented writer, while this book left me only wanting more.
**side note, I read the Patrick Melrose novels (4 novels spanning from 1992 - 2006 now collected into one volume, plus a ‘final’ one published separately in 2011) before I had a bookstagram, but it’s easily in my top 10 novels of all time and I highly recommend reading it prior to Double Blind!