How to Leave the House
On sale
6th March 2025
Price: £9.99
‘Uproarious, generous and witty’ New York Times
‘What a debut’ Stephen Fry
‘Terrific, inventive and compelling – and also very funny’ Ben Elton
‘A wild and funny ride through modern life’ Financial Times
It’s Natwest’s last day before he leaves for university, and there’s only one thing on his mind: the deeply embarrassing package he ordered to his house – which still hasn’t arrived. He won’t leave town without it. Any alternative is too distressing to consider …
This is the story of twenty-four hours in the life of Natwest, and his small-town odyssey in pursuit of the missing package. It’s also the story of all the people he encounters on this single day in his home town – from his mother to the dentist to the girl at the bus stop in a very sticky situation – and how their very different lives are entwined with his own.
‘What a debut’ Stephen Fry
‘Terrific, inventive and compelling – and also very funny’ Ben Elton
‘A wild and funny ride through modern life’ Financial Times
It’s Natwest’s last day before he leaves for university, and there’s only one thing on his mind: the deeply embarrassing package he ordered to his house – which still hasn’t arrived. He won’t leave town without it. Any alternative is too distressing to consider …
This is the story of twenty-four hours in the life of Natwest, and his small-town odyssey in pursuit of the missing package. It’s also the story of all the people he encounters on this single day in his home town – from his mother to the dentist to the girl at the bus stop in a very sticky situation – and how their very different lives are entwined with his own.
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Reviews
Nathan Newman's How to Leave the House is a brilliant exploration of the many absurd and human ways that our lives intersect. Their sharp, honest prose skillfully reveals the vulnerability and desire coursing through the center of characters. This is the rare novel that is just as compassionate as it is funny, as engaging as it is smart."
Witty, sharply observed and truly original
It's impossible not to be charmed by this big-hearted story ... it's so sweet and fun - an exciting debut from an author whose assuredness and polish could easily be mistaken for that of an old pro
Raucous, smart and funny ... intelligent prose, insightful commentary and compelling characters
This zippy novel takes place in the course of twenty-four hours on the day before the protagonist is meant to leave for university ... sprinkled throughout are wide-ranging cultural references-from Charlie Chaplin to broken phone screens-that nod at humanity's interconnectedness, and, ultimately, help the boy learn that his is only one among many rich lives
It is a miracle to pull of the feat of being wickedly scabrous (incurring in this reader loud snorts of laugher throughout) and managing somehow to be generous and ultimately warm-hearted too; a miracle that Nathan Newman pulls off brilliantly. What a debut
Most books that claim to be funny aren't actually all that funny. How to Leave the House is a rare exception - genuinely hilarious, utterly obnoxious, impressively daring
Rich with pathos and humour ... A bold new fiction voice
A really terrific, inventive and compelling read - and also very funny
How to Leave the House is gobby, barbed, and garrulous; a novel that takes swings, with swagger
Uproarious ... Generous and witty, as bewitched by aesthetics as it is certain of the virtues of good old-fashioned compassion ... filled with richly observed artistic references reminiscent of Ali Smith ... Newman weaves the analytical and the absurd with a raucous grace. Profound - and profoundly sidesplitting
Bursts upon the palate like drain fluid ... a wild and funny ride through modern life
Newman's entertaining debut feels fresh and young, portraying modern life with a mixture of humour and reflection
It's a witty, sprawling story about life's big changes and the things that never change, told with style and smarts by a remarkable new voice