
Chetan Bhagat's feminist manifesto follows Goldman Sachs superstar Radhika Mehta challenging India's patriarchy. Breaking pre-order records and sparking nationwide debate on taboo topics - can a successful woman have it all when society says she shouldn't?
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Imagine standing at your own lavish destination wedding in Goa, surrounded by 200 guests, when you realize you're trapped in a life you don't fully want. This is exactly where Radhika Mehta finds herself - a brilliant 27-year-old Vice President at Goldman Sachs with a seven-figure salary who has become "highly unlikeable" by Indian standards because she's opinionated, financially independent, and sexually experienced. As relatives bicker over ceremonial details and the resort becomes a pressure cooker of family dynamics, Radhika faces an existential crisis that forces her to confront the contradictions of being a successful Indian woman in a society that simultaneously pushes women to achieve while punishing them for outshining men. Throughout life, Radhika has carried the weight of being labeled the "smart one" rather than the "pretty one" - a distinction that has shaped her identity and relationships. During her bachelorette party, her sister Aditi's toast crystallizes their prescribed roles: "My sister only studied and worked hard... I had the boobs, she had the brains." This reduction of women to either beauty or intellect reflects the constrained roles society offers them. Despite ranking at the top of her class at prestigious institutions and securing a coveted position at Goldman Sachs, her mother's immediate reaction was anxiety: "How will we ever find you a husband now?" The message was clear - in Indian society, a woman's professional success could become an impediment in the marriage market.
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