How to Be Somebody Else, Miranda Pountney
How to Be Somebody Else, Miranda Pountney
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How to Be Somebody Else

Author: Miranda Pountney

Narrator: Florence Howard

Unabridged: 6 hr 35 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 02/15/2024


Synopsis

Brought to you by Penguin.

Exquisitely written, sublimely fraught and erotically charged, How to Be Somebody Else is an uncoming of age in New York City

Spring 2015, New York.

On the surface Dylan has achieved the impossible - a life in New York, eight years of making this stick. And yet it is not the thing she'd imagined (what had she imagined?). When she walks out of her career, then apartment, and into a housesit for an artist she's never met, she does not tell her friends, her parents back in England, or Matt, her boyfriend, living on the West Coast.

Job-free, rent-free, she'll make good on her book, herself, other things too, she's thinking, when her neighbour Kate shows up and invites her to a party. There she meets Gabe, who happens to be married to Kate but insists, 'it's not a thing'. The affair that follows consumes her and she begins to consider what is fixed and what is variable. Can a person be both? Is Gabe the thing he seems? Is she?

As spring turns to summer, her experiments in living test loyalties and boundaries until an unexpected encounter between the two couples forces her to confront her future.

©2024 Miranda Pountney (P)2024 Penguin Audio

Reviews

Goodreads review by Kate on January 22, 2024

Hmmm. I think I may have missed the point of this book since I didn't really think it unsettling at all. The story follows Dylan, an English woman, who decides to give up her job in advertising and sub-let her flat as an AirBnB while she goes to flat/cat sit for another woman but still in New York. S......more

Goodreads review by mary on March 11, 2025

2.5 ★ ”failure at what, does she mean — at intimacy? her body? new york? or more fundamentally, at the proposition of herself, so painstakingly assembled in her twenties, now beginning to glitch” 😳 dark, soul crushing and completely self incflicted. the literary children of ottessa moshfegh are being......more

Goodreads review by Adriana on June 22, 2025

el verano de una chiquita un poco loquita en una gran ciudad (podría ser yo)......more

Goodreads review by Sarah AF on April 01, 2024

From the blurb, I really thought this would be my kind of book only to spend much of it waiting for it to click on an emotional level. It never came. I enjoyed the writing well enough. That kind of wistful, drifting writing that reflects a character lacking direction and purpose. It came down to the......more

Goodreads review by Ania on September 19, 2025

,,Lately there's been crying. Only at night, but most nights, usually, at some point before sleep. She might be halfway through brushing her teeth when the tears show up, as part of the swoosh and spit of things, or she'll discover them later, wetting a collar, corner of pillow, page of a book. The......more


Quotes

A stunning novel. Remarkable and real. Every single line is supercharged with a kind of cerebral eroticism, a zinging inventive intelligence. The sentences buzz and hum

Sharp and entertaining Daily Mail

Impressive… A book founded on the anxiety that undermines our drive towards attachment and stability, and it thrives on a constant sense of slippage and precarity, a jumpy exploration of what it might feel like to cede control, and what might take its place Observer

Pountney has an admirable clarity of voice and her book is consistently impressive… Intelligent, confident and original Times Literary Supplement

How to Be Somebody Else has literary oomph... What sets this debut apart is the way it sustains its sparky style to the last page without stinting on the serious stuff Sunday Times

Brutal and brilliant, in luscious prose, How to Be Somebody Else shows us what happens when life starts to unfurl

Unsettling and original

So sharp and well observed. I loved the wry, understated humour, and how perceptive the book is about female desire. In its exploration of a woman trying to make sense of herself it is moving without being sentimental, and clever without seeming to try too hard

Compulsive. It makes its moves with such assurance that it’s hard to believe this is Pountney’s first novel. A wild mess of sex and feeling is here given beautiful form

A novel of graceful sentences and perfectly-lit vignettes, often obliquely funny; the minutiae and questionable decisions of a newly reimagined life, observed at just the right distance for us to see the whole and the details at once