'A love letter to home and friendship' - Kieran Yates
'An essential guide to modern living' - Daisy Buchanan
'This is a comprehensive, thoughtful guide that provides much-needed practical advice but crucially a vital sense of optimism. A timely helping hand!' - Yomi Adegoke
How do you keep it together when you're living together?
If you’ve found yourself asking this question (returning home from a day of winning in the workplace only to realise you've lost the fight for your own living room — again) then it’s likely that you're one of the millions of people living in a house share in the UK, US and beyond.
Between marriage rates dwindling and the cost-of-living soaring, house sharing is becoming more and more common – but that doesn’t stop it being one of the most complex living set-ups of the 21st century. Thankfully, journalist and serial house sharer, Alice Wilkinson is here to help you stay sane when you're feeling stuck.
This is the friendly and informed guide to house sharing you have been waiting for. From how to choose the right housemate to navigating conflict when it (inevitably) arises, Alice draws on interviews with experts such as Professor Dunbar, 'The Millennial Therapist' Sara Kuburic and more to explore the anxieties that run the lives of young professionals living in house shares to help create a more harmonious home.
A timely read that anyone who is or has been in a flat share can relate to. It makes you realizes some of your flaws and is cathartic for highlighting the flaws of others.
I truly believe this book has the potential to improve the quality of people's lives in flatshares - I wish I could go back 10 years in time and gift this to my younger self, what a change it could have made! My flatshare days are hopefully behind me, but I find this a great book for processing those experiences. While reading this I realised how little emotional work/capacity I've given to those experiences, and how unimportant I've deemed all of it, and how terribly wrong I've been in doing so. Thank you for opening my eyes to a whole new corner of emotional wellbeing I've been neglecting so far! Will be recommending to absolutely everyone.
Made a lot of sense although my experiences are small - could relate some of this to moving from country to country during our nomadic lifestyle with International education when often saying goodbye to friends and associates who either move on themselves or when we have left. Would recommend this self help book to others going through such situations.
A book with an important topic, and I did appreciate some of the advices given by the author or psychologist she has interviewed on how to get along well with your housemates.
But the content is quite repetitive. Most of the content could be concluded in one sentence: be honest with your housemates and yourself about your needs in a calm manner.
when i first started reading, i found it a bit basic and repetitive. but turns out that having the basic stuff laid out for you in a kind and knowledgeable way does actually help a lot! i feel so much more equipped for living with people than i did before :) lots of dog-ears of ideas and thoughts to return to!
A frustrating lack of awareness for BIPOC, queer, and disabled housemates. Some of the advice is general enough to fit everyone, but this seems more like a guide for white, cishet, able-bodied and/or allistic women.
There are many types of relationships that aren't represented here, either.