Skip to main content

Member Reviews

Thank you to Doubleday Books and NetGalley for the ARC.

Bring the House Down was a fascinating take on critics and their criticism, mob mentality, social justice, and how we take in new art.

The irony is not lost on me that I’m leaving a review for this book; I imagine quite a few people will probably have the same feeling as they leave theirs as well.

This book is quick-witted, funny, and reads very quickly. It’s also pretty in your face with its messaging-that’s not necessarily a bad thing though. I will say the messaging fell flat at times just because I didn’t believe Sophie at times.

You’re in Sophie’s POV, so she is watching this all go down between Hayley, Alex, and the world. It was interesting choice to have it from Sophie’s POV and not the act (Hayley) or Alex (the critic). I assuming using Sophie allowed her to have her own moment.

What I liked:
Alex and Hayley. These were very realistic characters. Alex is exactly the unabashedly confident, self important intellectual you see in the real word. His journey I would even say is 99% believable. Hayley also is realistic, and I appreciate her portrayal of the betrayal, the anger, doubt, and at the end, proud but tired.

The writing. Quick, funny, intentional, and hard hitting.

The messaging. There are quite a few themes happening in this book. Criticism vs cruelty, connecting: mob mentality vs standing together, discipline and perseverance, and my personal favorite, how we all live in a state of perpetual response.

The setting was fun! The descriptions of different shows, people, and installations was vivid. Shout out to that one dude who was getting his face/beard licked in an exploration of intimacy and transgression.

What I didn’t like:
Josh-Sophie’s partner. I’m sorry, but if anyone said some of things he said, I’m dropping the dude. Especially about Sophie’s mom?! His ending pissed me off so much that it actually dropped the rating for me.

(Some of) Sophie’s actions/choices. Ironically, she was the most frustrating part of the book for me. I can’t help but feel like she made incorrect choices (especially with Josh), and maybe that is the point. It’s not always satisfying, and we stick with people or ideas that aren’t ideal or the best for us.

I would recommend this book. You can see yourself, your sister, your mom, your friends and colleagues in this book. The critique and discussion of art (or other things) makes you take a step back and think of all the reviews you have ever given

Was this review helpful?

Just absolutely brilliant.

Through Sophie’s eyes, we witness a spectacularly public unraveling—a front-row seat to a social and professional car crash at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Housed with her insufferable and condescending colleague, the infamous critic Alex Lyons, Sophie watches in disbelief as Alex makes the catastrophic decision to bring home an actress... mere hours after publishing a scathing one-star review of her one-woman show.

Lyons, a well-known name on the festival circuit, has crushed many careers with his brutal critiques. But this time, he’s messed with the wrong artist. The actress rewrites her entire show—turning it into a no-holds-barred takedown of Alex Lyons himself. And the new version? A total hit, a viral sensation!

What follows is equal parts hilarious, uncomfortable, and genius. A revenge story set on the world’s quirkiest stage, Bring the House Down by Charlotte Runcie skewers ego, art, and accountability in one sharply observed spectacle.

#doubleday #bringthehousedown #charlotteruncie #fringefiction #reviewsthatbite #booktokcomedy

Was this review helpful?

Clever stuff. What seems at first rather simple and anodyne turns, eventually, into a thoughtful and many-layered contemplation of time, change, the news cycle and its inconstancy, and so much more. In fact, a prodigious number of topics are covered in the story, and nicely measured from both sides. Did I entirely buy the ending and its shock of understanding and movement forward? Not quite, but the journey leading up to it felt fresh and appealing. A stealthily impressive debut.

Was this review helpful?

I didn’t love this one. I actually didn’t finish it. It started off strong and different but I felt like it lost it way.

Was this review helpful?

*Bring the House Down* offers a fascinating glimpse into the ruthless world of art and theater criticism, but it’s a tough read due to its insufferable characters. The protagonist, Sophie, is frustratingly self-destructive and often whiny, making it difficult to connect with her. Meanwhile, Alex Lyons—more of an apathetic antagonist than a true lead—is so irredeemably unlikeable that you almost root for his downfall. While the book effectively captures the pettiness and politics of the industry, the unpleasant characters make it hard to stay engaged. Though the behind-the-scenes perspective is intriguing, it’s ultimately not a book I’d revisit.

Was this review helpful?

Hilarious, thought-provoking, and sharp. Hayley has just put on her first show at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. She meets a handsome man that evening and wakes up in his apartment. In the meantime, that handsome man has written a scathing and humiliating one-star review of her show. When Hayley transforms her show into a critique of Alex, she becomes an instant star and other women begin revealing their own horror stories.

This was wonderful. I loved the author’s decision to tell the story from the point of view of Alex’s colleague, Sophie. The deftly novel explores cancel culture, nepotism, art, criticism, and more.

Thank you very much to Doubleday and NetGalley for an opportunity to read this exciting debut!

Was this review helpful?

“Bring the House Down” by Charlotte Runcie has a premise that immediately caught my attention. A theatre critic at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival writes a vicious one star review of a theatrical performance. The star performer totally unaware of the review, has a one night stand with the critic who has just written what could be her career ending review. Totally humiliated she rewrites her show to discredit and ruin the critic’s career.
The story is told through the voice of the critics coworker and roommate who is struggling with her own issues which escalate as she is pulled into her roommate’s downfall. This book explores the power of a critics voice and the difference between a honest critique and cruelty.
I loved the first quarter of this book and the last quarter even more. The middle was predictable and a bit repetitive, but that did not stop me from enjoying this debut which has a fun and unique storyline.

Thank you NetGalley and Doubleday Books for the ARC in exchange for my honest review.

Was this review helpful?

Art critics Sophie and Alex travel to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival where they are forced to question the roles of critic s in the artworld and how separate are our personal and professional lives. I liked this a lot although I think it kind of dragged in the last 25%.

Was this review helpful?

I love Edinburgh and love the Fringe and so I was really excited for this book. The author did a great job of capturing the beauty and uniqueness of the city as well as the particular atmosphere of the festival. There was commentary about who art is created for, the creation of art and performance,cancel culture, power dynamics, motherhood, and what reviewing art means in modern day. All of this commentary was super interesting and integrated really well into the story so that it never felt heavy handed. This was a phenomenal, entirely engrossing read.

Was this review helpful?

I’m not sure what to make of this novel. It blew my mind several times, though I regret not taking notes, so I can’t point to specific examples. What stood out most was the way the narrator (and by extension, the author) subtly challenges the reader, posing indirect questions like, How is this any different from that other, more common thing people do every day? It’s clever and offers fresh perspectives, but at times, these mind-bending analyses felt overwhelming—almost like the narrator was rambling about the world without a clear direction.
In a way, it felt like the blurb had been stretched across 300+ pages, as if the book had already said everything it needed to upfront. I’m still not sure what I just read or even how to categorize it. The only real surprise was Alex on stage and the fire, but that moment was over so quickly that I was left wondering: What was the point—other than, you know, driving the title home in the most literal way possible?
The narrative structure also threw me. This was my first time reading a story where the narrator isn’t the main character, and I wasn’t sure how to feel about it. Throughout the book, I kept asking myself, Where is this going? Will the narrator eventually become involved? Is this about her, or is she just observing, obsessing? For the first 65% of the story, she remains more of a bystander to the main characters, which creates a sense of detachment that made it harder to connect with them.
And while the book was marketed as funny, I found it more depressing than anything. Did I miss the point? Maybe I’ll keep wondering about that. In the meantime, thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read the ARC of this debut novel.
PS/ I’m usually an Alex kind of gal—one star or five, no dithering in the lukewarm middle—but here I am, stuck in the murky waters of moderation and going full three-star diplomacy with my unpopular opinion. Personal growth?

Was this review helpful?

"Three stars isn't even a bad review! Three stars is good! But nowadays, in the context of a mass culture of online shopping reviews, for most people, five stars has come to mean the baseline rather than the outstanding" YES!!!!!! EXACTLY!!! Like, finally, a book that takes on the absurdity of review culture -- where personal recommendation has been replaced with consensus. Where opinions are pre-vetted for us because we don't trust ourselves to like something unless we see that other people already like it. And yes, I understand the irony of writing that in a literal review.

This book has plenty to say about power dynamics, feminine rage, cancel culture, and performance. It asks super important questions like what is the line between accountability and revenge? What does it mean to be truly sorry? What is the appropriate social sanction for a person who does something shitty, but not illegal? Why do we, as women, spend so much time dissecting bad men's complex motives when the reality that they probably didn't think about why they did what they did very much at all? And what is the difference between honest critique and cruelty? And I loved all of that. But without a doubt, the part that hooked me the most is this razor sharp dissection of how we engage with art and opinions in the first place. The deeper questions are interior ones: why do we need someone else to tell us what we think before we get a chance to decide for ourselves? Why are we so terrified of making up our own mind and, God forbid, changing it later.

Bring the House down is wildly entertaining, wickedly smart, and so singularly itself that only Charlotte Runcie could write it. Hell of a debut.

Was this review helpful?

I generally love books set in cities I love, this time Edinburgh. I found it hard to get involved with the characters. There was a predictability from the start.

I think the author has a great future, look forward to reading more.

Thank you Netgalley for tge opportunity to read a book by a new author.

Was this review helpful?

*Bring the House Down* by Charlotte Runcie is a brilliantly inventive and poignant novel that explores the intersection of art, identity, and the complexities of family dynamics. Runcie's sharp prose and thoughtful narrative create a compelling and heartfelt story that lingers long after the final page.

Was this review helpful?

interesting story about a writer and the play that he see and gives a bad review and then she ends up doing a play on his life and all the ways that he wronged women. Great story

Was this review helpful?

I believe it was Virginia Woolf that said people read fiction like they’re listening to gossip. This book was the perfect example of that. It was an absolutely addicting read, especially as someone with experience in both theatre and journalism (I do see the irony in reviewing a book about the ethics of criticism by the way). The characters were written with nuance, and remained three-dimensional throughout, even as they were doing and saying terrible things. There was also a healthy dose of satire, which kept things from feeling too heavy. As I was reading I thought it was a solid four star read, but the ending really elevated the stakes and brought this to five stars for me.

Was this review helpful?

I loved this book! During the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, a critic goes to see a one-woman show. He hates it and writes a blistering one-star review. He then goes to a bar where he meets the woman from the show. He doesn't say who he is and they sleep together. She awakens in his apartment and sees the review. And away, we go.

Perfect comic premise executed with precision by Charlotte Runcie. Well-drawn character, a great setting with the Edinburgh Festival. I really enjoyed it quite a bit. The perfect funny MeToo novel.

I received a free e-galley of the novel from Netgalley in return for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

Bring the House Down was a fun, thought-provoking read. Hayley Sinclair debuted her one-woman show at the British Fringe theatre festival. Alex Lyons was the assigned critic. Later that night, Hayley and Alex end up in bed together. But Hayley doesn't know that Alex has eviscerated her show with a one-star review until the next morning, when she's waking up in his apartment and sees the review in the paper.

Hayley decides to turn the scathing review into an opportunity: that night, she renames her show to The Alex Lyons Experience. Hayley gets on stage and asks the audience, can you believe what he did? The show explodes in popularity. After all, most of us have been victim to something absurd. And if you look at the wealthy, privileged, white male - which Alex is - he's often in the perpetrator role.

The story is told from the perspective of Alex's coworker, roommate, and fellow critic, Sophie. Sophie's feelings about Alex vacillate: empathy, disgust, sadness, appeal.

Overall, I thought this was a unique story and an enjoyable read. It's always fun when a plot feels totally new. At times, I couldn't decided if I liked or disliked the characters, but it didn't get in the way of the story for me. 3.5 stars rounded up. Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

I want to thank knoph Doubleday Group and NetGalley for allowing me to read and review Bring the House Down by author Charlotte Runcie. This is the British authors first novel and uses the Edinburgh Festival and her experience there. as an arts journalist.
Alex and Sophie are sent by their newspaper to cover the Festival. They share a flat.
Alex gives a one star “tedious and derivative” review to Hayley’s one woman show! All hell breaks loose the next morning when she comes out of his bedroom in the flat and discovers Alex and the review in the paper!
Ms Runcie’s characters are flawed and create tough situations.
Bring the House Down publishes 07/28/2025.

Was this review helpful?

Junior culture writer Sophie finds herself at the Edinburgh Fringe accompanied by Alex Lyons, the iconic, cynical, and some may say, cruel arts critic for an extended reporting gig. Alex writes a biting, one-star review of a one-woman show, the star of which unknowingly sleeps with him, and chaos ensues...

The best parts of this book are the start and end—it really felt like the plot was driving forward in those portions and exciting stuff was happening! At the top, I was very engaged in the exposition and set up of Alex's treacherous act. The finale was unexpectedly fiery and brought the book to a satisfying close. The midsection of Bring the House Down, however, felt meandering and long, much of it revolving around the hole Alex continually digs himself deeper into, and the tremendous self doubt that our narrator Sophie possesses. She is not a particularly decisive individual, which at times became a bit dull, and Alex's judgment progressively worsens in his handling of the scandal (repetitive).

I did appreciate at the end, the proprietor of the show Hayley, acknowledges that her spectacle has become deeply exhausting and consuming. To me, this reflects the reality of vengeance in the age of the internet, which, while cathartic, also has the capacity to drain and fatigue the individuals at the center of it.

Was this review helpful?

this was a weird strange book. I am not sure if it just went over my head, or if the book was just not making sense. I am not sure. I think it was too much of a creative writing assignment, so it was hard for me to enjoy


Thank you to NetGalley, to the author, and to the publisher for this complimentary ARC in exchange for my honest review!!!

Was this review helpful?