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Permanence

A sleek and addictive modern love story from the Booker Prize-longlisted author of The Water Cure

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Permanence

By: Sophie Mackintosh
Narrated by: Florence Howard
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Summary

Brought to you by Penguin

One of the most anticipated books of 2026 as chosen by Vogue, Stylist, Forbes, Oprah Daily and LitHub
This is the story of an affair. Clara and Francis are in love, but nobody knows it. For months they have been slipping away from their respective lives, sharing stolen afternoons in hotel rooms, their time together painfully sweet and all too short. Until one day they wake up in a bedroom neither of them recognises with no memory of how they got there.

They find themselves in a strange and unfamiliar city: a place where adulterers can live openly as couples, without fear of consequence, putting the theory of their love into practice. Here the sky is painted over the old town square in changeless, cloudless blue. Ripe fruits wait on the table each morning and the sunset comes down in a blaze of pink each night. And contact with the real world is impossible. As long as Clara and Francis are here, they only have each other.

How do you know when you’ve found true love? How much would you sacrifice to keep hold of it? And how long can you stay in paradise before the cracks start to show?
From the Booker Prize-nominated author of The Water Cure and Cursed Bread comes an intoxicating modern love story. Permanence is a thrillingly erotic and sharply relatable portrait of longing and obsession, intimacy and betrayal, possession and dispossession.

'Like Severance for relationships' Oprah Daily
‘Sophie Mackintosh turns the novel of adultery inside out’ Lauren Elkin
‘It will stay with me for a long time’ Monica Heisey
© Sophie Mackintosh 2026 (P) Penguin Audio 2026

Contemporary Family Life Genre Fiction Literary Fiction Metaphysical & Visionary
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Critic reviews

Chic, enthralling, utterly plausible, Mackintosh's latest novel is my favourite of the lot... Her writing hums with elegance . . . It's the kind of book that you'll want to read in one long gulp, the literary equivalent of a crisp glass of rosé . . . [It] needs to be savoured
Dreamlike, sensuous, intoxicating . . . Mackintosh probes the pull and hidden cost of illicit love in this unsettling speculative romance
Inventive and convincing . . . A rich, alluring concept, offering much literary fun (Sarah Moss)
Sophie Mackintosh is a master of the arresting premise . . . She’s excelled herself here with a time-slip novel about an adulterous couple who, 18 months into their affair, wake up to find themselves in a parallel city where they can indulge their desires to their hearts’ content . . . Mackintosh explores the implications, delusions and limitations of desire in its myriad forms in a transfixing novel that elegantly balances profundity and playfulness
It reads like a dream which is secretly a nightmare. I loved it (Vincenzo Latronico, author of 'Perfection')
Lyrical and precise . . . Mackintosh has a spare and confident hand . . . When Mackintosh writes about masculine power, she does so in a way that articulates both its seductions and its terrors . . . Permanence has the same erotic charge as her earlier work, the same preoccupation with social prohibitions and the thrill that comes from breaking them
A haunting and seductive novel which pulses with the possibility, or impossibility, of love. The unmet needs and violent hungers of Sophie Mackintosh’s characters do not remain within their bodies but instead fester in the crumbling monuments and shifting landscapes they inhabit. As her readers, we too are pulled into those glimmering psychic fissures (Avni Doshi, author of 'Burnt Sugar')
I loved this sensuous, moving, and quietly devastating novel. Sophie Mackintosh’s portrait of a couple in desperate thrall to doomed romance—and her revelations about the dangers and delights of intimacy, of vulnerability’s risks and rewards—will stay with me for a long time (Monica Heisey, author of 'Really Good, Actually')
Like Severance for relationships... Sophie Mackintosh is exactly the writer you want for this kind of uncanny desire experiment
I adore Sophie Mackintosh’s eerie, ethereal fictions – gorgeous, psychologically fraught fever dreams that linger in the mind for days after reading
All stars
Most relevant
I've read the quite cruel Guardian review about ’Permanence’ so I began it with a slight reticence. But the novel is a perfection. The right style, the right tempo, the right lenght to fully experience the tender tedium of The City of Permanence, the place that reacts to every feeling of the secretive lovers and shapes them in a way. It is all about Clara and the oh so married Francis, their lives and loves in and out of the City, at times sterile and perfect, but mainly in decay. It is not true that the idea of the novel is poorly conceived: the holes ont he texture give the sufficient space to our imagination. The prose is economic and soft, such as the beautiful narration of Miss Florence Howard. I’m sorry this sad, plastic romance is over…

An unromantic love story briliantly written

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