The House
On sale
22nd October 2020
Price: £7.99
Genre
‘A prescient page-turner about secrets, lies, ruthless ambition and betrayal’ SARAH VAUGHAN
‘A rare view from the inside of the Machiavellian machinations for power . . . Fascinating’ HARRIET TYCE
__________
In their remarkable debut political thriller, Tom Watson, former Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, and Imogen Robertson open the doors to The House, a place of ambition, hope, friendship . . . and betrayal.
Once allies, Labour MP Owen McKenna and Conservative Minister Philip Bickford now face each other across the House of Commons as bitter enemies. Then the reappearance of a figure from their past forces them to confront the choices that led to the tragic downfall of their former housemate, Jay.
Late one night, Owen receives a visit from a lobbyist who promises to protect him from the consequences of his actions in exchange for one, small favour – or to have his reputation and career utterly destroyed if he refuses. But that favour will sell out everything Owen believes in.
As rivals gather and whispers of wrongdoing fill the corridors of Westminster, it’s clear that someone knows the truth about Jay’s Icarus-like fall from grace. Now, the former friends must face one terrible truth…
Someone is responsible, and a reckoning is overdue.
__________
‘Politics red in tooth and claw. Watson and Robertson capture, with scalpel precision, the neurotic allure of the Westminster power game‘ LUKE JENNINGS
‘Few people know more about what goes on behind the political scenes than Watson, and it is all unveiled here, in a snappy, twisty page-turner’ HOLLY WATT
‘A rare view from the inside of the Machiavellian machinations for power . . . Fascinating’ HARRIET TYCE
__________
In their remarkable debut political thriller, Tom Watson, former Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, and Imogen Robertson open the doors to The House, a place of ambition, hope, friendship . . . and betrayal.
Once allies, Labour MP Owen McKenna and Conservative Minister Philip Bickford now face each other across the House of Commons as bitter enemies. Then the reappearance of a figure from their past forces them to confront the choices that led to the tragic downfall of their former housemate, Jay.
Late one night, Owen receives a visit from a lobbyist who promises to protect him from the consequences of his actions in exchange for one, small favour – or to have his reputation and career utterly destroyed if he refuses. But that favour will sell out everything Owen believes in.
As rivals gather and whispers of wrongdoing fill the corridors of Westminster, it’s clear that someone knows the truth about Jay’s Icarus-like fall from grace. Now, the former friends must face one terrible truth…
Someone is responsible, and a reckoning is overdue.
__________
‘Politics red in tooth and claw. Watson and Robertson capture, with scalpel precision, the neurotic allure of the Westminster power game‘ LUKE JENNINGS
‘Few people know more about what goes on behind the political scenes than Watson, and it is all unveiled here, in a snappy, twisty page-turner’ HOLLY WATT
Newsletter Signup
By clicking ‘Sign Up,’ I acknowledge that I have read and agree to Hachette Book Group’s Privacy Policy and Terms of Use
Reviews
Politics red in tooth and claw. Watson and Robertson capture, with scalpel precision, the neurotic allure of the Westminster power game
A prescient page-turner about secrets, lies, ruthless ambition and betrayal
The novel is good on Westminster's hinterland of wonks and wannabes, and what it's like to be the prey of a media feeding frenzy
Few people know more about what goes on behind the political scenes than Watson, and it is all unveiled here, in a snappy, twisty page-turner
A rare view from the inside of the Machiavellian machinations for power ... Fascinating
The depiction of the sacrifices and betrayals required by politics benefit from an insider's knowledge, and the plot driver of bullying allegations is topical and commendably unexpected
Intelligent and disturbing, both for its insights into the way politics works and for its glimpses of a post-virus future