The Charterhouse of Padma

by Padma Viswanathan

Godine

The Charterhouse of Padma

by Padma Viswanathan

Godine

Synopsis

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.

This book may also be available at the TIFA Festival Bookstore.

About the Author

Padma Viswanathan's books have been published in eight countries and shortlisted for the PEN USA Prize, the Scotiabank Giller Prize and others. Her most recent books are Like Every Form of Love: A Memoir of Friendship and True Crime and The Charterhouse of Padma: A Novel. Her short fiction, essays and translations have appeared in Granta, The Boston Review, BRICK and elsewhere. Full-length translations include São Bernardo, by Brazilian novelist Graciliano Ramos, and Where We Stand by philosopher Djamila Ribeiro. She is Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Arkansas—Fayetteville, where she is Founding Director of the Arkansas International Writer at Risk Residency Program.

Read more about Padma Viswanathan

Photo credit: Alex Tran.

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