Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

The Charterhouse of Padma

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Two women, living in America's heartland, unearth shocking secrets about the men they love and question the lives they chose.
P is on deadline. She should be translating. Instead, she's writing obsessively about her favorite color: chartreuse. A literary translator in Arkansas (of all places), she's married to Mac, a professional feminist too slick for his own good. As the COVID lockdown commences, P discovers a secret about her husband, one that upends her understanding of her life's trajectory. In the widening gulf between who she is and who she thought she might be, she imagines a double, someone very like her, but less lonely, more independent, more angry, more maternal, more fun...
Now we meet another "P": a novelist. She's married to a successful poet and translator called Mat. It's a second marriage—her first fell apart when she came upon a secret concealed by her then-husband. This P is exhausted and enraged: by racial microaggressions, by structural obstacles, by her husband's dubious responses to her ambitions. Then the pandemic falls and her new novel falters, along with everything else she (and everyone else) had planned. In this new stillness, though, she starts to see her marriage differently. And, unexpectedly, she begins an essay, about her favorite color: chartreuse.
The Charterhouse of Padma is full of delicious surprises, revelations, and sharply observed truths about what is to be brown, a woman, a wife, a mother, and an artist. Exhilarating, electrifying, charged with incisive intellect and humor, this is a novel for anyone who ever wondered how, or if, they ever chose the thing they love.

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 23, 2024
      Two Indian Canadian women, both academics, grapple with revelations about the men in their lives in this perceptive work of experimental fiction by Viswanathan (Like Every Form of Love). The first section takes the form of an essay by P, who teaches literature at the University of Arkansas with her husband, Mac. She snoops through his computer during the Covid-19 lockdown and is unnerved to discover a folder of stealthily taken photos of women, including herself. In the second part, another P, who’s also a professor at the University of Arkansas, happily weathers the pandemic in her large house with her parents, two children, and successful author husband, Mat. She reflects on the end of her first marriage to Hamish, which ended after P discovered that Hamish had mysteriously stolen a bunch of women’s wallets, including her own. Each woman offers fascinating insights on the color and liqueur chartreuse, which interests them because of its secret recipe and history as a cure-all treatment, and their impetus for writing is revealed in the final section, which depicts their separate trips to a chartreuse-making monastery in France. This intrigues. Agent: Anjali Singh, Anjali Singh Literary.

    • Kirkus

      October 15, 2024
      An academic couple weathers pandemic quarantine in two different versions of what their marriage might have been. In the opening pages of Viswanathan's third novel, a woman named P, her husband, Mac, and their two children, Aakash and Deepa, come together in the kitchen on the day in March 2020 when the world shuts down. Cracks already exist in the marriage--P, a tenured professor in translation, loves her job but feels the strain of being a South Asian native of Montreal in the deeply conservative American South. Mac, whose work on the intersections of "industrial design, corporate structures, and feminism" is what first brought them to Arkansas, is in danger of being denied tenure but refuses to jump through the tenure committee's hoops, thus threatening the whole family's stability. As quarantine wears on, those cracks are widened beyond repair by a truly disturbing secret P uncovers on Mac's laptop one night, pushing her into a burgeoning self-reliance that takes the form of a Maggie Nelson-style book about the color chartreuse. On a parallel course, a woman named P, her husband, Mat, and their children, Nikhil and Sarojini, come together in the kitchen in March 2020 on the day the world shuts down. P and Mat are both tenured professors, both more-or-less fulfilled in their careers, though while Mat loves Arkansas and the economic freedom it affords them, P feels she has been "trailing him since they fell in love" and longs for recognition on her own terms. When P is accepted for a fellowship at the Sorbonne to work on her book about the color chartreuse, Mat's response destabilizes the careful fairness of their marriage. Periodically interrupted by passages from P's chartreuse essay, the twin narratives mirror each other in different lights--one revealing the inequities in a marriage founded on secrecy, one exploring the consequences of unfettered choice. The result provides ample fodder for a reader interested in the knotty problems of preserving individual identity within a family or society; institutional inequity in academia and beyond; or just the possibilities inherent to a woman who gives herself time alone to think. Unfortunately, the author makes structural choices that allow the sections on chartreuse to float untethered from either of the two P's narratives. The result is the creation of a third P--the author of the essay--who, rather than bringing all the P's together, muddles the tension of the novel and allows it to hang, slightly baggy, from the structural armature of its own form. Heady, intellectual, ambitious, and not fully realized.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

subjects

Languages

  • English

Loading