- Published: 10 January 2019
- ISBN: 9781473558694
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 288
Professor Chandra Follows His Bliss
- Published: 10 January 2019
- ISBN: 9781473558694
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 288
Professor Chandra is as acerbic and unbending a curmudgeon as one could wish to find scowling from the pages of a novel. Brilliant, pompous, and baffled by the world outside his Cambridge study, Chandra is forced on a reluctant quest to America to find himself and his family. Searingly funny, uplifting and wonderful
Helen Simonson, author of MAJOR PETTIGREW'S LAST STAND
There's a long tradition of trying to describe the spiritual search and the ineffable mystery without sounding like a pretentious snob or a sappy Pollyanna. Professor Chandra Follows His Bliss manages to pull it off. The book tackles perennially difficult and deep questions with humor and humanity, beautiful writing, and a page-turning storyline. I gave myself over to Professor Chandra's journey as he opens himself to self-examination, family healing, and a more courageous experience of being alive
Elizabeth Lesser, author of New York Times bestseller BROKEN OPEN and Cofounder, Omega Institute
I loved this beautiful beautiful book. It's tender and compassionate, written with exquisite care and verve, and so so SO funny
Marian Keyes
Heartrending, hilarious, and deeply wise, this novel about the clueless Professor Chandra – emotional blockhead, Cambridge don, and Nobel-wannabe – left me in tears when I wasn’t laughing. His crash course in self-realization at 70 reveals how little he actually knows, about himself and the crazy family he loves, and that it’s never too late to grow up or follow your bliss wherever it takes you. I could not put this novel down
Mark Matousek, author of Sex Death Enlightenment and When You’re Falling, Dive
I loved this beautiful beautiful book. It's tender and compassionate, it's written with exquisite care and verve and it's so so SO funny
Marian Keyes
Rajeev Balasubramanyam wields considerable humor, the perfect antidote to our polarized and exhausting present, while crafting a tender and thoughtful tale. This is an absolute gem of a book
Shelf Awareness
By turns charming and witty, this is an effortless, uplifting read that has many pertinent observations to make about family relationships
Simon Humphreys, Mail on Sunday
This brilliant and eloquent novel, which puts into words so many unutterable annoyances, is a sort of Zen satire in which tolerance and understanding mingle with hilarious criticism of contemporary mores. It’s a wonderful read
Wendy Holden, Daily Mail
A warm and funny account of one man’s attempt to be more chill
Francesca Carington, Tatler
Uplifting literature, or up-lit as it’s called by publishers, is dominating the bestseller charts... One of the funniest is Professor Chandra Follows His Bliss by Rajeev Balasubramanyam... Beneath the comedy lie serious concerns. Wellness, capitalism, mollycoddled minds intolerant of political difference: Balasubramanyam’s issues are current
Francesca Angelini, Sunday Times
One of the funniest novels to be released in some time
Sunday Times
A gentle ride of a book that tackles all of life’s big questions and also manages to be very, very funny
Red
After the brilliant, stressed, cynical economist Professor Chandra has a serious accident, he is told to take a break and 'follow his bliss' to California. Little does he know he'll discover a thing or two about happiness
Elle
Balasubramanyam demonstrates with insight and a dash of humor that it’s possible to turn one’s life around after everything goes wrong...makes a winning case for how meditation, restraint, self-reflection and owning one’s character flaws can bring joy and satisfaction to life
Publishers Weekly
Rajeev Balasubramanyam gently pokes fun at the modern fondness for positivity, but tells a disarmingly positive story... The writing is elegant and witty and the comedy is always underpinned with humanity; a life without bliss is no life, and the gradual dawning of Chandra’s self-awareness is genuinely uplifting
Kate Saunders, The Times
Balances satire and self-enlightenment... a surprisingly soulful family tale that echoes Jonathan Franzen’s Corrections in its witty exploration of three children trying to free themselves from the influence of their parents
Ben East, Observer
Chandra is a delightful creation: peevish, intolerant, intellectually exacting, unwittingly eccentric, nerdy, needy let lovable. The book, like its picaresque hero, is a one-off
Patricia Nicol, Sunday Times
Delightful...by turns witty and wise...almost Wodehouse-like
Donal O'Donoghue, RTE Guide
Witty and uplifting, this is a must-read
Woman's Weekly
Balasubramanyam sets Chandra on a journey through his hardest feelings, working through the anger and emotional ineptitude that too often conceal his infinite love for his family. At first, Chandra's children take even his self-blame for selfishness, but subtle changes in his introspection make for a big outward shift. With humor and emotional agility, Balasubramanyam writes a feel-good story that leaves room for feeling bad
Booklist
Recovering fuddy-duddy Chandra is a droll creation, and his journey of self-realization feels like the real thing
Kirkus
Accompanying Chandra as he sets about untangling the knots in his personal life is both uplifting and entertaining. The language of spiritual healing comes naturally to Balasubramanyam, and he deploys it to great effect in this superbly relevant story for our times
Shahina Piyarali, Shelf-Awareness
His journey provides a genuine look at what happiness is or might be, as well as being properly, heart warningly funny. A joyful take on grasping second chances
Alexandra Heminsley, Grazia
A book that is as quirky and charming as its title... This is a tender, at times hilarious, look at life which is at once both funny and moving. If you loved The Rosie Project, then this book is definitely for you!
Kat O'Connor, SHEmazing!
Balasubramanyam knows how to flex irony as if it were another bendable body part... Professor Chandra is a wonderful character — stodgy, flawed, contentious, contemptuous — yet vulnerable, insecure, lonely, repentent, and ridiculous enough to win our sympathy. In other words, as one of his children responds to his apologies, when they come, "You weren't pathetic, Dad. You were just human." In the end, Balasubramanyan's novel is a sort of Christmas Carol for a new age — in which uplifting sentiment comes drenched not in treacle but in potfuls of soothing organic herbal tea
Heller McAlpin, NPR
A heartfelt, very funny story
Metro, *Summer reads of 2019*
[A] beautifully realised book… Very lovable
i