From the bestselling and award-winning author of I Hope This Finds You Well comes a sharply funny, surprisingly tender novel about a woman stuck in place, her nosy neighbours and the journey to find where she belongs—with all the heart of a grown-up The Breakfast Club 

Mona thought her living situation was bad . . . but the real mess is just beginning.

One day is all it takes for Mona’s life to implode. After years of climbing at her marketing firm, she was supposed to be getting promoted and finally moving out of her crumbling apartment building. Instead, she’s jobless, aimless and still stuck in a space barely big enough for a yoga mat.

Then her eccentric landlady takes a tumble and asks Mona to step in as the building’s reluctant super. The deal is simple: help prep the place for sale, and she can secure the upgrade she’s been chasing. But that’s easier said than done when the neighbours treat “boundaries” as optional. There’s the shouting couple, the mysterious shut-in, a possible panty thief in the laundry room—and Sami, the relentlessly cheerful diner owner who keeps showing up with coffee and unsolicited ideas about community. As Mona gets pulled deeper into the building’s chaos—and closer to the people inside it—she’s forced to confront what, and who, she’s really been trying to outrun. Sometimes, the place you’re desperate to leave is the one that finally shows you who you are.

Wise, heartfelt and laugh-out-loud funny, Natalie Sue’s sophomore novel is a story about burning out, starting over and finding your people in the most unexpected places—perfect for fans of The Wedding People and Anxious People.


“Such a good time—a warm and funny story of found family that brings a whole neighbourhood to life. By the end of the book I felt like I'd lived there myself.”

—Holly Gramazio, New York Times bestselling author of The Husbands

“Brimming with humor, You'll Love It Here is studded with a memorable cast of characters that I instantly fell in love with. This is a heartwarming, joyous book about the power of community, and a reminder that friendship can flourish in the unlikeliest of places.”

—Sophie Wan, author of Women of Good Fortune