The Startup Wife

A Novel

Hardcover, 304 pages

Published July 13, 2021 by Scribner.

ISBN:
978-1-9821-5618-3
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4 stars (5 reviews)

Halfway through her PhD and already dreaming of running her own lab, computer scientist Asha has her future all mapped out. Then a chance meeting and whirlwind romance with her old high-school crush, Cyrus, changes everything.

Dreaming big, together with their friend Jules they come up with a revolutionary idea: to build a social networking app that could bring meaning to millions of lives. While Asha creates an ingenious algorithm, Cyrus’ charismatic appeal throws him into the spotlight.

When the app explodes into the next big thing, Asha should be happy, shouldn’t she? But why does she feel invisible in the boardroom of her own company? Why are decisions being made without her? Gripping, witty and razor-sharp, The Startup Wife is a blistering novel about big ambitions, speaking out and standing up for what you believe in.

6 editions

Captivating

5 stars

I was completely captivated by The Startup Wife from almost the very first page and loved the time I spent with Asha Ray through reading this novel. I found that the startup concept itself really spoke to me so personally wanting the idea to be true was a strong part of my enthusiasm for the book. However, I could also believe strongly in the characters and their relationships to each other. Having worked, albeit briefly, within an IT environment myself, I could recognise people's motivations and I was also reminded of reading 7 Unicorn Drive by Dani Polajnar, a memoir of a real-life unicorn startup. Tahmima Anam has a lot to say about the mixing of marriage with business, especially how the societal and cultural expectations we bring into relationships with us can determine our behaviours without us being fully aware of their influence. There is also a thought-provoking feminist …

Review of 'The Startup Wife' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Meh. It kept getting close to having something interesting to say about several topics I would be interested in -marriage, the lives of second generation immigrants, the struggles of women in some industries, religion - but we only get snippets of what could have been a much more interesting exploration of them. The weak ending doesn’t help resolve any of those many threads of thought. Too bad, really. Still there is a story, and at least those topics get some discussion.

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rated it

3 stars
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rated it

5 stars