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How Do You Like Me Now?

On sale

30th May 2019

Price: £8.99

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Selected: Paperback / ISBN-13: 9781473667761

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The most perceptive book I have ever read about the female interior’ DOLLY ALDERTON

‘Identifiable, heart-breaking and wickedly funny. I’d say this is one of my favourite books of the yearGIOVANNA FLETCHER

‘Bourne holds a mirror up to contemporary aspiration’ SUNDAY TIMES

*****

Everyone wants to be Tori Bailey.

A straight-talking, bestselling author, she’s inspired millions of women around the world with her self-help memoir and uplifting posts online. What’s more, her perfect relationship with her long-term boyfriend is the envy of all their friends.

But Tori isn’t being honest.

While everyone around her is getting engaged and having babies, Tori’s boyfriend will barely look at her, let alone talk about marriage. And when her best friend Dee unexpectedly falls in love, suddenly Tori’s in danger of being left behind.

Tori’s built a career out of telling women how to live their best life, but is she brave enough to admit it’s not what she wants?

*****

The debut adult novel by bestselling author Holly Bourne is a blisteringly funny, honest and moving exploration of love, friendship and navigating the emotional rollercoaster of your thirties.


Everyone is raving about this book!

Brutally honest, appallingly funny and very moving – so accurate on the female interior, and the loneliness life in the public gaze. I want to read everything Holly Bourne has written now’ ROSIE WALSH

‘It’ll resonate with anyone trying to convince themselves that sticking it out is better than being alone.’ EMERALD STREET

‘Relatable for any woman navigating emotional time bombs’ RED

‘It speaks so many truths about being a woman in your thirties; friendships, love and what a fickle beast social media can be. ‘ CLEMMIE HOOPER

‘Hilarious and painfully true’ GRAZIA

‘Sure to resonate with anyone navigating the emotional minefield of their thirties’ RED ONLINE

‘Funny, real and heartbreaking. I haven’t been this obsessed with a book in years.’ LUCY VINE

‘Injected with such reality it can’t help but be hilarious’ TIMES

‘A very funny novel that lives up to its hype’ THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH

Reviews

Culturefly
Funny, real and incredibly relatable
Stylist
Honest and unflinching
Grazia
Hilarious and painfully true
Lucy Vine, bestselling author of <i>Hot Mess</i>
I haven't been this obsessed with a book in years. It's painfully funny, real, but also heartbreaking. Get this book now or be the loser who can't join in when everyone else is talking about it.
Lucy Diamond, bestselling author of <i>The House of New Beginnings</i>
'A smart, witty and perceptive novel; Bourne is razor-sharp on friendship, self-image and self-deception'
Red Online
Sure to resonate with anyone navigating the emotional minefield of their thirties
Laura Jane Williams, <i>Ice Cream for Breakfast</i>
Sublime, perfectly observed
Roisin Meaney, author of The Reunion
Funny, sad, honest, insightful, up-to-the-minute. Bourne's pacy narrative kept me guessing (and hoping)to the last page.
Bookseller
'This novel is sharply observant about the issues in young women's lives today - feminism, relationships, mental health and motherhood - and it is very, very funny.
Carmel Harrington, author of <i>The Woman at 72 Derry Lane </i>
Authentic, funny and utterly relatable; this book gave me all of the feelings. This generation's Bridget Jones!
Emerald Street
Bourne incinerates the lies we're all capable of telling ourselves in this raw and very funny book; it'll resonate with anyone trying to convince themselves that sticking it out is better than being alone.
Red
Relatable for any woman navigating emotional time bombs
Marian Keyes
It is so good! It is so honest about being a woman and all the things that are expected of us ... I enjoyed it very much.
Evening Standard
Truly a f***ing good novel
Grazia
There's a duality in reading things that are super relatable - it feels great to be heard, but also a little exposing. There's a little bit of that in Holly Bourne's latest novel, but nothing will stop you getting to the end...This novel is funny, touching and searingly honest
BBC News Online
Perfectly addresses the storm of emotions you go through as a young woman, growing up in a world where you need to have the best boyfriend, best career and best group of friends (and it's all got to be displayed beautifully across your social media profiles.)
Clemmie Hooper
It speaks so many truths about being a woman in your thirties; friendships, love and what a fickle beast social media can be.
Times
Injected with such reality it can't help but be hilarious
Metro
'This is a deeply feminist novel that questions whether the competitive nature of social media is breeding a lifestyle conformism among women that can only limit their freedom and their happiness. It is also, almost line by line, wincingly funny'
Stylist
Will strike a chord with anyone who worries about their relationship with social media, feels like they're being left behind by their friends or is wrangling with the pressures of being in, or out, of a partnership in their 30s. Buy it for your best mate whose boyfriend isn't good enough for her, your recently dumped sister or just for yourself if you're feeling a little 'what the hell?' about your fourth decade; you'll all take something from it
Stylist
Tori is surely the Bridget Jones of our times
Stylist
Brutally honest but charmingly funny
Sheerluxe
Well-written, genuinely funny and movingly honest. It could be a life-changing read for many.
The Express, S Magazine
Holly Bourne nails the pressures that young women face and captures that feeling of teetering on the edge of 30 and still not knowing what you want from life. It's funny and sad in equal measures'
The Sunday Telegraph
A very funny novel that lives up to its hype
Sunday Times
Mordantly funny, flinchingly well-observed... A smart, zeitgeisty, and caustically funny read, it has characters you root for. More than that, however, Bourne holds a mirror up to contemporary aspiration, deftly probing the dissonant dualism between the shinier selves projected online and people's offline reality.
Dolly Alderton, The High Low Podcast
The most perceptive book I have ever read about the female interior
Giovanna Fletcher
Identifiable, heart-breaking and wickedly funny. I'd say this is one of my favourite books of the year
Helen Lederer, Metro
Cheerfully plunders all that can be plundered from a young woman's quest for life in the 'fast line'
Bookseller
Funny, astute, bitingly honest, it's a genuine triumph
Rosie Walsh, author of <i>The Man Who Didn't Call</i>
Brutally honest, appallingly funny and very moving - so accurate on the female interior, and the loneliness life in the public gaze. I want to read everything Holly Bourne has written now