The Private Life of Mrs Sharma
The Private Life of Mrs Sharma book cover

The Private Life of Mrs Sharma

Paperback – December 13, 2016

Price
$7.56
Format
Paperback
Pages
192
Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1408873649
Dimensions
6.14 x 0.6 x 9.31 inches
Weight
10.5 ounces

Description

"Renu, the mesmerizing narrator in Ratika Kapur's The Private Life of Mrs. Sharma , has a gift for self-deception. It is baffling, then funny, and then quite poignant to witness . . . . The story [ The Private Life of Mrs. Sharma ] tells is taut, focused; its wider setting, the new India, pops with life. But the real star of this show is Renu, the Mrs. Sharma of the book's title. She starts in one dimension, then gradually plumps into three." - The New York Times "[Mrs. Sharma's] words reveal a dignity more private and complex than society can perceive. The book is worthwhile, and quick to read--perfect for your train ride to work." - The New York Times Book Review "[Sharma's] fraught, often humorous and irreverent narration is a study in cognitive dissonance, in which she is constantly trying to reconcile the complex stimuli of Delhi with the image of herself as a simple woman from a good family. Even as cultural products can feel increasingly generic in our technologically advanced global marketplace, Kapur proves that a gifted writer can still powerfully capture a complex voice from a singular place and time." - starred review, Kirkus Reviews "The battle between then and now comes alive in Kapur's novel of life in an evolving India. Renuka's inner conflict mirrors that of her nation's battle to participate in an increasingly global world while maintaining traditions and cultural heritage. A beautiful, tragic, and highly recommended work by a writer previously long-listed for the Man Asia Literary Prize." - Booklist "In Mrs. Sharma, Ms. Kapur has fashioned a memorably double-sided character for a novel that, like a gathering storm, changes before your eyes from soft light to enveloping darkness." - Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal "If you're ready for ravishing glimpses into the secret passions of a contemporary yet traditional Indian wife, mother and medical worker who takes a lover, you'll adore The Private Life of Mrs Sharma ." - Elle "Mrs. Sharma's mounting omissions to her family will have you tearing through the pages of this provocative novel." - Marie Claire " The Private Life of Mrs. Sharma is an impressive decoy of a novel, with a narrator whose look-over-here instincts inadvertently draw the reader's attention to what's behind every curtain." - The Rumpus "An absolute treat . . . this is a book you'll be tempted to read in one sitting." - Bustle, “8 Best Fiction Books Coming Out This December That Are Perfect For Holiday Snuggles” "The first-person peregrinations of Renuka Sharma . . . reveal both a wry, honest voice and a perceptive witness." - Vulture.com, “7 Books You Need to Read This December” "One sign of a great novel is an ending that seems shocking when you read it but entirely inevitable when you look back over the events of the book . . . The Private Life of Mrs Sharma delivers this punch both emotionally and in terms of its plot. Tender and funny . . . [Kapur] is a gifted writer . . . The author’s language is vivid and brutally honest . . . a razor-sharp take on gender and economic inequalities." - Irish Times "Clever, wise . . . wonderfully funny . . . an easy pleasure to read . . . I will remember this book for years to come. The points it makes about motherhood, responsibility and self-deception are all so close to home . . . The feel of contemporary Indian life, caught between tradition and modernity, is brilliantly captured." - Newsday "In Ratika Kapur's compelling tale, narrator Renu is in need of fulfillment. While her husband tries to make it in Dubai, she remains in Delhi, feeling trapped and alone. Her escape: an affair with a magnetic stranger she meets on her commute." - US Weekly "This delightfully funny novel delivers a serious message about what happens when our responsibilities push us to the breaking point." - People, “Book of the Week" "A unique and original new voice in Indian English fiction." - The Hindu "A universal tale for our times . . . A novel that should speak to women everywhere." - The National (UAE) Ratika Kapur's first novel, Overwinter , was longlisted for the Man Asian Literary Prize. Elle magazine's Indian edition included her in a Granta -inspired list of twenty writers under forty to look out for from South Asia. She lives in New Delhi with her husband and son. ratikakapur.wordpress.com

Features & Highlights

  • Renuka Sharma is a dutiful wife, mother, and daughter-in-law holding the fort in a modest rental in Delhi while her husband tries to rack up savings in Dubai. Working as a receptionist and committed to finding a place for her family in the New Indian Dream of air-conditioned malls and high paid jobs at multi-national companies, life is going as planned until the day she strikes up a conversation with an uncommonly self-possessed stranger at a Metro station. Because while Mrs. Sharma may espouse traditional values, India is changing all around her, and it wouldn't be the end of the world if she came out of her shell a little, would it?
  • With equal doses of humor and pathos,
  • The Private Life of Mrs Sharma
  • is a sharp-eyed examination of the clashing of tradition and modernity, from a dramatic new voice in Indian fiction.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(208)
★★★★
20%
(138)
★★★
15%
(104)
★★
7%
(48)
28%
(194)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Delusion of being under control

I liked this book since it has a deep message but presented in a very simple way. We see Renu Sharma whose situation is going out of control. Instead of looking at things as it is, she sees it in a different light where she thinks she is under control. But this is not how she sees it when it comes to her son. She sees that he is out of control and reacts accordingly.

Renu is in a fast lane out of control. She does not step on the brakes and change direction. What she does is she keeps stepping on the gas till it ends tragically. Till the end, she thinks she is under control. What this book taught me is that it is hard to know when someone is completely out of control till it is too late.

The author style of writing makes one see how complex women are. They are juggling so many things and want to appear the way the society expects of them which is to be a lot of things, especially respectable in Renu's case.. But that makes them susceptible to a fantasy life until it becomes too real.

Is this book making a statement about women's life in that they need to be taken care of emotionally, psychologically, physically and professionally for them to be really satisfied? I don't know but that is what I got out of it.
7 people found this helpful
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Very good read!

I loved this book. Completed it within a few days! Very compelling! Was shocked at the ending. Very thought provoking about the life of an ordinary woman. I realized, in the end, however, that no person is ordinary. Everyone has a story! The only reason I gave it four stars is that, the ending was so shocking, that it almost seemed contrived.
5 people found this helpful
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I am amazed how this was even reviewed by New York Times

I read this book after I read its review in the Book Review for New York Times. This is clear example of plagiarism from two hindi movies from recent years. The plot is lifted entirely from these movies. The plot of how she meets this guy at the metro station is stolen from the movie "Metro". The rest of the plot along with the ending is stolen from another lesser known movie, "BA Pass". I am amazed how this was even reviewed by New York Times.
2 people found this helpful
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Or to find a reason to like any of the characters

I, too, kept waiting for the book to get interesting. Or to find a reason to like any of the characters. But, alas, it didn't happen.
2 people found this helpful
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I do not recommend it at all

This is the most poorly written book I have ever read
It was selected for our book club so I forced myself
to finish it. I do not recommend it at all.
1 people found this helpful
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Not great

Long run for a very short story.
1 people found this helpful
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How unreliable do you like your narrators?

Renuka Sharma has ambitions for her small family. She has encouraged her husband to work away in Dubai so that in years to come, they can have a better life, a life more in keeping with the modern Indian dream. But she's missing her husband and her teenage son is beginning to push the boundaries. Renuka is finding it increasingly hard on her own to exert control. And then there are the nights…

Ratika Kapur is to be congratulated: she has conjured up a unique narrator’s voice that throws the reader off-balance at every turn. From the diary-like account of the apparently mundane life of an ordinary Indian housewife and mother, the first person narrative grows organically into a tense and all-too-believable psychological thriller. Really, it is a remarkable achievement.
1 people found this helpful
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Three Stars

Strange book.
1 people found this helpful
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Enjoyed reading this novel a lot

I really enjoyed reading this novel. I felt a bit sad when it ended. I hope the author comes up with a sequel.

The book made me think a lot on variety of issues:

1) challenges of parents who with a very intention choose to live separately for economic prosperity:

2) the challenges that come on the mother raising a teenager by herself in such situations;

3) the peril of attraction and the emotional escalations and mismatches that come with it

4) the hopes, dreams, joys and challenges of middle class living

And many many more topics

Overall a wonderful read and I enjoyed reading the novel a lot
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unreasonable ending

Unreasonable ending, style of writing not so convincing and “I don’t want to boast” but have read better.. though I didn’t enjoy the book I kept reading it and I am still wondering why.