Choice: A Novel
An ingenious, devastating, explosive novel about the ramifications of choice from "one of the most original and talented authors working today" (NPR).



"How ought one to live?" This is the question that obsesses London-based publisher Ayush, driving him to question every act of consumption. He embarks on a radical experiment in his own life and the lives of those connected to him: his practical economist husband; their twins; and even the authors he edits and publishes. One of those authors, a mysterious M. N. Opie, writes a story about a young academic involved in a car accident that causes her life to veer in an unexpected direction. Another author, an economist, describes how the gift of a cow to an impoverished family on the West Bengal-Bangladesh border sets them on a startling path to tragedy.



Together, these connected narratives raise the question: How free are we really to make our own choices? In a scathing, compassionate quarrel with the world, Neel Mukherjee confronts our fundamental assumptions about economics, race, appropriation, and the tangled ethics of contemporary life.
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Choice: A Novel
An ingenious, devastating, explosive novel about the ramifications of choice from "one of the most original and talented authors working today" (NPR).



"How ought one to live?" This is the question that obsesses London-based publisher Ayush, driving him to question every act of consumption. He embarks on a radical experiment in his own life and the lives of those connected to him: his practical economist husband; their twins; and even the authors he edits and publishes. One of those authors, a mysterious M. N. Opie, writes a story about a young academic involved in a car accident that causes her life to veer in an unexpected direction. Another author, an economist, describes how the gift of a cow to an impoverished family on the West Bengal-Bangladesh border sets them on a startling path to tragedy.



Together, these connected narratives raise the question: How free are we really to make our own choices? In a scathing, compassionate quarrel with the world, Neel Mukherjee confronts our fundamental assumptions about economics, race, appropriation, and the tangled ethics of contemporary life.
24.99 In Stock
Choice: A Novel

Choice: A Novel

by Neel Mukherjee

Narrated by Shaheen Khan, Sofia Engstrand, Antonio Aakeel

Unabridged — 10 hours, 49 minutes

Choice: A Novel

Choice: A Novel

by Neel Mukherjee

Narrated by Shaheen Khan, Sofia Engstrand, Antonio Aakeel

Unabridged — 10 hours, 49 minutes

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Overview

Notes From Your Bookseller

Told in three connected narratives, one "written" by another character in the novel, Choose uses its structure to examine urgent contemporary themes of choice and consequence. This is a brilliantly told story that excels on a technical level, facilitating the lasting impact it leaves.

An ingenious, devastating, explosive novel about the ramifications of choice from "one of the most original and talented authors working today" (NPR).



"How ought one to live?" This is the question that obsesses London-based publisher Ayush, driving him to question every act of consumption. He embarks on a radical experiment in his own life and the lives of those connected to him: his practical economist husband; their twins; and even the authors he edits and publishes. One of those authors, a mysterious M. N. Opie, writes a story about a young academic involved in a car accident that causes her life to veer in an unexpected direction. Another author, an economist, describes how the gift of a cow to an impoverished family on the West Bengal-Bangladesh border sets them on a startling path to tragedy.



Together, these connected narratives raise the question: How free are we really to make our own choices? In a scathing, compassionate quarrel with the world, Neel Mukherjee confronts our fundamental assumptions about economics, race, appropriation, and the tangled ethics of contemporary life.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

"Mukherjee is brilliant at tracing the ways a choice deferred becomes a fate sealed.… [C]ool, calm, all-noticing."— Jonathan Lee New York Times Book Review

"There are no obviously right or wrong decisions in these stories, only a series of actions that trap the characters within their own set of consequences.… Mr. [Neel] Mukherjee pulls the reader into these problems with a seriousness and technical excellence that makes a lot of what is published today seem immature. Choice asks much of readers. But, for all its pessimism, it trusts us to be up to it."— Sam Sacks Wall Street Journal

"Like many contemporary writers, Mukherjee is anxious about injustice. But in this brilliant, bleak moral maze of a novel, where every right turn is a wrong one, we will find no lessons about what is to be done—even if Lenin lurks in the epigraphs. Choice is more like the tale of the enlightenment of Buddha, the awakened one (the woke one, we’d say today), which Ayush fixates on: it rouses our moral intuitions from privileged slumber and spurs us not to action, but to intricate contemplation of what actions mean."— Tanjil Rashid Guardian

"Choice is full of moments like this: complex, happily contradictory little flowerings of correspondence that can really be appreciated only in retrospect.… [Mukherjee] is capable of sustained stretches of syntactically enterprising, engagingly disputatious prose, at once conversational and poetically compressed."— Nat Segnit Times Literary Supplement

"Beautifully written. There are countless wonderful descriptions…and subtle psychological insights."— Benjamin Markovits Telegraph

"Mukherjee impresses. He captivates readers but also stimulates them by rigorously exploring race, agency, equality, the weight of our moral quandaries and the implications of our choices."— Malcolm Forbes Minnesota Star Tribune

"Probing and ambitious, this is an engaging work from a fabulously gifted writer."— Booklist

"Searing, poetic, and beautifully brutal, Choice reveals just how far the imagination—when buoyed by courage and conscience—can travel. One realization I take with me from Mukherjee’s intrepid prose is this: to be honest in our living, and to refuse despair, is to assent to a whole new vocabulary of humility."— Tracy K. Smith, author of To Free the Captives: A Plea for the American Soul

"Neel Mukherjee is a great novelist.… He knows how to clothe ethical conflicts with sweeping narrative and convincing detail. The range of his knowledge—from London intellectual and professional life today to the precarious hardships of the ‘ultra-poor’ in Bengal—is shockingly deep. He is a writer of genius."— Edmund White, author of The Humble Lover

"Choice is Neel Mukherjee’s best book yet: a brooding meditation on the complexities of agency and duty, freedom and guilt, in a savagely unequal world. It’s a vital, haunting, devastating read."— Sarah Waters, author of The Paying Guests

"A searing indictment of neoliberal folly, a profound and beautiful meditation on compassion, Choice is exactly the kind of novel we need now—the kind that nobody but Neel Mukherjee can write."— Paul Murray, author of The Bee Sting

"A magnificent accomplishment. In each panel of this masterful triptych—or each movement of this classical sonata—exquisite prose gradually crescendos to jaw-dropping revelations.… Choice is a deeply human novel, and a humane one.… We come to realize, to feel through experiencing the successive waves of the novel’s movements, that a human life is not simply the result of rational choices but rather, as Neel Mukherjee puts it, the lull between them—a rich and swaying lull, thick with love and responsibility."— Namwali Serpell, author of The Furrows

"This book speaks to our present moment with such intelligence as to move it from the merely brilliant to the vitally important. Kaleidoscopic yet intimate, philosophical yet affecting, Choice is a stunning, haunting accomplishment."— Karen Joy Fowler, author of Booth

"Choice burns brightly with fierce intelligence, with wisdom and compassion, and achieves what so few novels even attempt: it makes the reader think deeply about how we’ve come to live this way, at what cost, and about those who pay the greatest price."— Monica Ali, author of Love Marriage

"If the world were a patient, one would like to entrust it to a surgeon like Neel Mukherjee, whose keen eyes, formidable intelligence, masterful scalpel, and compassionate approach offer us reassurance and hope without any illusion."— Yiyun Li, author of The Book of Goose

"Choice is perhaps the most brilliant novel I’ve read this year. It is the reminder of why we need fiction. Profound and devastating, Choice is as dark and hauntingly beautiful as it gets. A masterpiece of the highest order."— A.M. Homes, author of The Unfolding

"Here is a magnificently clear-eyed portrait of our times lit equally by sorrow and rage. Neel Mukherjee is a superb writer, and Choice is his greatest work yet."— Michelle de Kretser, author of Scary Monsters

"These pages abound with misery: animal mistreatment, the harsh plight of refugees, and dire poverty. But the rewards—indelible images, admirable story-telling, and wicked good writing—are many."— Barbara Love, Library Journal, starred review

"Mukherjee puts his piercing intelligence and fine technique to the service of urgent issues and gargantuan choices, in a world where simple solutions are rarely available…a determinedly provocative work of fiction—passionate, graphic, and uncomfortable."— Kirkus Reviews

Kirkus Reviews

2024-02-17
Intractable dilemmas challenge the very existence of several principal characters in Mukherjee’s new novel.

Divided into three connected parts, the book contrasts the consciences of socially aware European professionals with the survival struggles of African refugees and the very poorest of Indian villagers. Part 1 focuses on a London-based gay couple, Ayush and Luke, parents to Masha and Sasha. Luke, the higher earner of the pair, is an economist with the credo: “Economics is life, life is economics.” When not doing the lion’s share of parenting, Ayush works in publishing, editing books on diversity issues. A new author has recently joined his list but refuses to divulge more than the teasing name M.N. Opie. Tortured by capitalism’s distortion of everything, from farming to the climate, Ayush becomes increasingly unhinged. Part 2 features one of Opie’s stories, another clash between literature and economics. Emily, a middle-class English academic, is concussed after her taxi is involved in a hit-and-run. Confused and nauseated, Emily reaches out to the driver, Salim, and finds herself pulled into his world. And finally, Part 3, perhaps the work of one of Luke’s economist colleagues, sees a shift to India, where an impoverished family struggles to take advantage of the gift of a cow, only to discover this supposed opportunity to improve their finances brings additional, impossible burdens. Mukherjee puts his piercing intelligence and fine technique to the service of urgent issues and gargantuan choices, in a world where simple solutions are rarely available. This novel is more directly confrontational than his earlier books, and a challenge to the reader.

A determinedly provocative work of fiction—passionate, graphic, and uncomfortable.

2024 Goldsmiths Prize, Short-listed

Product Details

BN ID: 2940191478883
Publisher: HighBridge Company
Publication date: 04/16/2024
Edition description: Unabridged
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