With one child home with chicken pox, and feeling a little under the weather myself (perhaps I've gone out in sympathy?), I wanted something light-hearted, fun and entertaining to read, and Trust (Sphere Little, Brown and Company 2015) by Mike Bullen (the creator of the award-winning TV series Cold Feet) fitted the bill. Although Bullen now lives in Australia, Trust is set in inner London and reads like a fast-paced rollicking rom-com movie script, testament perhaps to his first love, screenwriting. If you are a fan of Toni Jordan's latest novel, Our Tiny Useless Hearts, you will enjoy Bullen's almost farcical account of two couples pulled this way and that by love, infidelity, the work/life balance, and the perils of parenthood. Greg and Amanda are ostensibly happy - they've been together 13 years and have two delightful girls. Dan and Sarah have been together longer and have a 15-year-old son (caught up in his own anxieties), but they are ostensibly unhappy. When a terribly bad decision by one - or perhaps by both men - during a weekend work conference causes a domino effect of a chain of more and more awful consequences, everyone is affected: their partners, their children, their neighbours, the resident gossips, their work colleagues, and a random selection of strangers, and of course, Greg and Dan themselves. As the two men try rather ineffectually to disentangle themselves from the messes of their own making (indiscretions leading to white lies leading to cover-ups leading to more substantial untruths...) the plot, as they say, thickens. And it all leads back to that great leveller: trust. Will trust keep everything from falling apart? Will trust be enough to get things back on an even keel? Trust in all its permutations is explored: a lack of trust, too much trust, misplaced trust, unrecognised trust, blind trust where there should be none, and guilt by association where trust would have better served. My main problem with the writing style was the frequent head-hopping of point of view characters which I found distracting, but Bullen's comedic writing results in a good read that is mostly funny and endearing, with a plot that is frequently clever, especially with the constant misunderstandings and miscommunications landing the characters in all sorts of hot water, and with an underlying message that is sometimes insightful.