Late Bloomers: A Novel - book cover
  • Publisher : Random House Trade Paperbacks
  • Published : 02 May 2023
  • Pages : 368
  • ISBN-10 : 059349802X
  • ISBN-13 : 9780593498026
  • Language : English

Late Bloomers: A Novel

An Indian American family is turned upside down when the parents split up thirty-six years into their arranged marriage​ in this witty, big-hearted debut.

"Equal parts funny and heartbreaking, Late Bloomers is a charming story about starting over, stumbling, and finding yourself at any age."-Jennifer Close, author of Marrying the Ketchups

"I have a soft spot for underdogs. And late bloomers. You've told me a lot of things about yourself, so let me tell you something about me."

After thirty-six years of a dutiful but unhappy arranged marriage, recently divorced Suresh and Lata Raman find themselves starting new paths in life. Suresh is trying to navigate the world of online dating on a website that caters to Indians and is striking out at every turn-until he meets a mysterious, devastatingly attractive younger woman who seems to be smitten with him. Lata is enjoying her newfound independence, but she's caught off guard when a professor in his early sixties starts to flirt with her.  

Meanwhile, Suresh and Lata's daughter, Priya, thinks her father's online pursuits are distasteful even as she embarks upon a clandestine affair of her own. And their son, Nikesh, pretends at a seemingly perfect marriage with his law-firm colleague and their young son, but hides the truth of what his relationship really entails. Over the course of three weeks in August, the whole family will uncover one another's secrets, confront the limits of love and loyalty, and explore life's second chances. 

Charming, funny, and moving, Late Bloomers introduces a delightful new voice in fiction with the story of four individuals trying to understand how to be happy in their own lives-and as a family.

Editorial Reviews

1

Suresh

All these internet women lie, I tell you. All of them. Funny that the anonymity draws everyone in. But it's also what keeps you from trusting a word.

Sometimes the lies are about the fundamentals: previous marriages, whether they have kids, what line of work they're in. Oh, and age. Age is a big one. The last date I went on was with a woman whose profile said forty-­one. Impossible! There wasn't a chance that Ms. Mittal (formerly Mrs. Mittal) was a day under fifty.

My son, Nikesh, laughed at me when I told him about that one. "But, Dad," he said, "you are fifty-­nine." Well that may be, but I didn't go around grossly exaggerating for sport. I was more reasonable about it all. On my profile, I described myself as "Suresh Raman, a healthy and active, five-­foot-­ten, fifty-­five-­year-­old divorced man of Indian origin."

All right, so fifty-­five was four years ago, the height was a rough estimate, and "active" was only an accurate description if it included toenail-­clipping while watching CNN in my carpeted den. But these were reasonable deviations from the truth. RDTs, I called them. So long as you kept it reasonable, where was the harm, really?

It was early evening now. I parked my SUV in front of a small, white brick house. I had to quash my misgivings-­for the next few hours, at least. I reminded myself: This was a first date, a new woman, a clean slate.

I sniffed under my arms. Good, still powdery fresh. I'd left my house in Clayborn, Texas, three hours ago, but I blasted the AC the entire drive to Austin. Whatever my doubts about lying internet women, I'd never want a date to see unsightly wet patches blooming across my shirt.

I checked my reflection in the rearview mirror. Even at this hour, the late-­August sun beamed harsh and unforgiving. My eyebrows looked like two furry worms wriggling around a pockmarked forehead. I licked my forefinger and tried pasting down the errant hairs. But it was useless. Hairs kept popping up in every direction. Oh well. Perhaps the restaurant would be dim and Mallika wouldn't notice the unruly duo dancing above my eyelids.

Mallika. We'd been emailing each other for two weeks. Now, this one did not seem like a liar. I couldn't be sure, of course, as I'd yet to see her in the flesh. At the moment, she was still three parts fantasy to one part reality-­a concoction of my hazy, lonely brain. Though given the mendacious tendencies of these internet women, it was hard to maintain any fantasy for long.

Mind you, this wasn't just abstract cynicism talking. It came from months of experience. And ...

Short Excerpt Teaser

1

Suresh

All these internet women lie, I tell you. All of them. Funny that the anonymity draws everyone in. But it's also what keeps you from trusting a word.

Sometimes the lies are about the fundamentals: previous marriages, whether they have kids, what line of work they're in. Oh, and age. Age is a big one. The last date I went on was with a woman whose profile said forty-­one. Impossible! There wasn't a chance that Ms. Mittal (formerly Mrs. Mittal) was a day under fifty.

My son, Nikesh, laughed at me when I told him about that one. "But, Dad," he said, "you are fifty-­nine." Well that may be, but I didn't go around grossly exaggerating for sport. I was more reasonable about it all. On my profile, I described myself as "Suresh Raman, a healthy and active, five-­foot-­ten, fifty-­five-­year-­old divorced man of Indian origin."

All right, so fifty-­five was four years ago, the height was a rough estimate, and "active" was only an accurate description if it included toenail-­clipping while watching CNN in my carpeted den. But these were reasonable deviations from the truth. RDTs, I called them. So long as you kept it reasonable, where was the harm, really?

It was early evening now. I parked my SUV in front of a small, white brick house. I had to quash my misgivings-­for the next few hours, at least. I reminded myself: This was a first date, a new woman, a clean slate.

I sniffed under my arms. Good, still powdery fresh. I'd left my house in Clayborn, Texas, three hours ago, but I blasted the AC the entire drive to Austin. Whatever my doubts about lying internet women, I'd never want a date to see unsightly wet patches blooming across my shirt.

I checked my reflection in the rearview mirror. Even at this hour, the late-­August sun beamed harsh and unforgiving. My eyebrows looked like two furry worms wriggling around a pockmarked forehead. I licked my forefinger and tried pasting down the errant hairs. But it was useless. Hairs kept popping up in every direction. Oh well. Perhaps the restaurant would be dim and Mallika wouldn't notice the unruly duo dancing above my eyelids.

Mallika. We'd been emailing each other for two weeks. Now, this one did not seem like a liar. I couldn't be sure, of course, as I'd yet to see her in the flesh. At the moment, she was still three parts fantasy to one part reality-­a concoction of my hazy, lonely brain. Though given the mendacious tendencies of these internet women, it was hard to maintain any fantasy for long.

Mind you, this wasn't just abstract cynicism talking. It came from months of experience. And in my months of experience, I'd learned that even when these internet women weren't lying about important things, like age, then they were lying about ridiculous things-­things I wouldn't have even cared about had they told me the truth. But when I discovered they'd lied about it, I had to assume it meant something.

Last month, for example, I went out with this divorced real estate agent from Baton Rouge named Usha. She lied about all kinds of trivialities. Favorite Food: Italian.

Trusting this preference in her profile, I suggested going to the Olive Garden on our first date. It had been a tiring six-­hour drive from Clayborn to Baton Rouge, but I wanted to show her that I was sensitive to this detail about her-­that I cared enough to remember. Upon hearing my suggestion, she shrugged and explained that Italian wasn't really her favorite. She wanted a steak. Feeling rebuked, I asked her why she didn't just say "steak" on her profile. She replied that she was afraid of scaring the divorced and widowed Hindu vegetarian men from answering.

Now, I wasn't an unsympathetic man. Or a vegetarian. And while I questioned the sanity of anyone who enjoyed masticating thick slabs of beef, I understood that a forty-­two-­year-­old divorcée with two teenage kids needed to expand her pool of possibilities in any way she could. Only that wasn't all.

Over the course of that evening, which began and ended at Matthew's Steakhouse, I discovered that in the dozen emails and phone conversations leading up to our fateful meeting, she'd lied about her car (a Honda not a Volvo), her glasses prescription for nearsightedness (minus four, not minus two), her tennis elbow (she didn't even own a racket), and her subscription to National Geographic (ha!). None of those things in isolation would have caused me to do more than raise a puzzled eyebrow. But read together, th...