The Palm House

Author Gwendoline Riley On Tour
Ebook
On sale Apr 14, 2026 | 224 Pages | 9798896230533

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From the author of My Phantoms and First Love, a droll and quietly evocative novel about work, friendship, family, and the path—so often muddled—toward finding one’s place in life.

Laura Miller and Edmund Putnam have been friends for a long time. Theirs is a happy meeting of minds, with long evenings spent huddled in an ancient pub by the Thames, where they share office gossip, reflect on their teenage passions, and lament the state of the world.

Recently, though, Putnam has been harder to reach: He has lost his father, and the magazine to which he has dedicated his life has been hijacked by an insufferable new editor, Simon “call me Shove” Halfpenny.

Laura has her own problems: Living in London, a beautiful but also indifferent city, with a prickly mother to manage and a tricky past to contemplate, she finds that day-to-day life presents its difficulties. And as Putnam starts to sink into despondency, she must try to bring him back.

A novel of enduring friendships and small mercies, The Palm House offers us Gwendoline Riley’s trademark keen observation and wit, and leaves us with a sense of possibility.
Gwendoline Riley was born in London in 1979. She is the author of seven novels, including First Love, My Phantoms, and, most recently, The Palm House. In 2018, The Times Literary Supplement named her as one of the twenty best British and Irish novelists working today.
“Outstandingly brilliant.” —Claire-Louise Bennett

“Gwendoline Riley is one of my favourite contemporary writers and The Palm House is the book of hers I love the most.” —Sheila Heti

“One has the sense, reading Riley, of being involved in an alarming experiment, that of reading the world without the slightest mercy or compromise. . . . We truly see her characters, in their descriptive nakedness, alive and horridly vivid.” —James Wood, The New Yorker

“Riley has occasionally been misread through a lens of trendy melancholia. But her work, especially since the breakthrough of First Love, more closely resembles the sturdy yet delicate realism of the 19th century—Chekhov, Stendhal—in which mundane objects, landscapes and exchanges are imbued with rich layers of social and psychological meaning. . . . Like Mary Gaitskill she is a moralist.” —Lidija Haas, The New York Times Book Review

“Riley has a spy’s attention to detail and a great and terrible power to re-create tics, pretensions, and the painfully recognizable human tendency to wallow in delusion.” —Rachel Connolly, New York magazine

“If you need any further proof that Gwendoline Riley is one of our finest prose stylists, look no further than her eighth book, The Palm House. She writes slender, scorching stories that capture the humour and pathos of ordinary English lives in unflinching detail and painfully funny dialogue.”
—Madeleine Feeny

"Riley’s particular ear for linguistic nuance and eye for pinpoint detail are as distinctive as ever in her seventh novel . . . On one level, this is an account of an ordinary existence short on plot developments; on another, it’s a subtly calibrated observation of how a person’s world turns. Riley elevates the everyday to exceptional heights." —Kirkus Reviews

"The Palm House might be my favourite novel of 2026 so far . . . It’s very funny and so full of pathos and horror. As ever, Riley’s cringe comedy is pitch perfect. The writing surprises but it’s always rooted in what feels true.” —Johanna Thomas-Corr, The Sunday Times (UK)

About

From the author of My Phantoms and First Love, a droll and quietly evocative novel about work, friendship, family, and the path—so often muddled—toward finding one’s place in life.

Laura Miller and Edmund Putnam have been friends for a long time. Theirs is a happy meeting of minds, with long evenings spent huddled in an ancient pub by the Thames, where they share office gossip, reflect on their teenage passions, and lament the state of the world.

Recently, though, Putnam has been harder to reach: He has lost his father, and the magazine to which he has dedicated his life has been hijacked by an insufferable new editor, Simon “call me Shove” Halfpenny.

Laura has her own problems: Living in London, a beautiful but also indifferent city, with a prickly mother to manage and a tricky past to contemplate, she finds that day-to-day life presents its difficulties. And as Putnam starts to sink into despondency, she must try to bring him back.

A novel of enduring friendships and small mercies, The Palm House offers us Gwendoline Riley’s trademark keen observation and wit, and leaves us with a sense of possibility.

Author

Gwendoline Riley was born in London in 1979. She is the author of seven novels, including First Love, My Phantoms, and, most recently, The Palm House. In 2018, The Times Literary Supplement named her as one of the twenty best British and Irish novelists working today.

Praise

“Outstandingly brilliant.” —Claire-Louise Bennett

“Gwendoline Riley is one of my favourite contemporary writers and The Palm House is the book of hers I love the most.” —Sheila Heti

“One has the sense, reading Riley, of being involved in an alarming experiment, that of reading the world without the slightest mercy or compromise. . . . We truly see her characters, in their descriptive nakedness, alive and horridly vivid.” —James Wood, The New Yorker

“Riley has occasionally been misread through a lens of trendy melancholia. But her work, especially since the breakthrough of First Love, more closely resembles the sturdy yet delicate realism of the 19th century—Chekhov, Stendhal—in which mundane objects, landscapes and exchanges are imbued with rich layers of social and psychological meaning. . . . Like Mary Gaitskill she is a moralist.” —Lidija Haas, The New York Times Book Review

“Riley has a spy’s attention to detail and a great and terrible power to re-create tics, pretensions, and the painfully recognizable human tendency to wallow in delusion.” —Rachel Connolly, New York magazine

“If you need any further proof that Gwendoline Riley is one of our finest prose stylists, look no further than her eighth book, The Palm House. She writes slender, scorching stories that capture the humour and pathos of ordinary English lives in unflinching detail and painfully funny dialogue.”
—Madeleine Feeny

"Riley’s particular ear for linguistic nuance and eye for pinpoint detail are as distinctive as ever in her seventh novel . . . On one level, this is an account of an ordinary existence short on plot developments; on another, it’s a subtly calibrated observation of how a person’s world turns. Riley elevates the everyday to exceptional heights." —Kirkus Reviews

"The Palm House might be my favourite novel of 2026 so far . . . It’s very funny and so full of pathos and horror. As ever, Riley’s cringe comedy is pitch perfect. The writing surprises but it’s always rooted in what feels true.” —Johanna Thomas-Corr, The Sunday Times (UK)