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Love Marriage: A Novel Hardcover – May 3, 2022
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“Cultural clashes, political satire, Oedipal conflicts, elegant prose—they’re all here in this romp of a book.” —Oprah Daily
A Phenomenal Book Club Pick and a New York Times Book Review Group Text Selection, Love Marriage is a glorious moving novel from Booker Prize shortlisted Monica Ali, who has “an inborn generosity that cannot be learned” (The New York Times Book Review).
In present-day London, Yasmin Ghorami is twenty-six, in training to be a doctor (like her Indian-born father), and engaged to the charismatic, upper-class Joe Sangster, whose formidable mother, Harriet, is a famous feminist. The gulf between families is vast. So, too, is the gulf in sexual experience between Yasmin and Joe.
As the wedding day draws near, misunderstandings, infidelities, and long-held secrets upend both Yasmin’s relationship and that of her parents, a “love marriage,” according to the family lore that Yasmin has believed all her life.
A gloriously acute observer of class, sexual mores, and the mysteries of the human heart, Monica Ali has written a “riveting” (BookPage, starred review) social comedy and a moving, revelatory story of two cultures, two families, and two people trying to understand one another that’s “sure to please Ali’s fans and win some new ones” (Publishers Weekly).
- Print length432 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherScribner
- Publication dateMay 3, 2022
- Dimensions6 x 1.4 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101982181478
- ISBN-13978-1982181475
From #1 New York Times bestselling author Colleen Hoover comes a novel that explores life after tragedy and the enduring spirit of love. | Learn more
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From the Publisher


Editorial Reviews
Review
“Quick footed and absorbing… The playful clash of cultures evolves into a subtle exploration of the ways in which both immigrant and nonimmigrant families have shaped their children, transmitting unexplored trauma across generations.” —The New Yorker
“Cultural clashes, political satire, Oedipal conflicts, elegant prose—they’re all here in this romp of a book.”
—Hamilton Cain, Oprah Daily
“Ali successfully skewers everyone—white feminists, children of immigrants, overconfident male doctors…funny and satisfying.”
—Jenny Singer, Glamour
“An absorbing and meaty exploration of love, family and culture...”
—Carole V. Bell, NPR
“Such lively characters, they practically waltz off the page to hand readers save-the-date cards… I came to care deeply about this flawed pair, whose destiny Ali unfurls with obvious glee and a touch of poetry.”
—Elisabeth Egan, The New York Times Book Review
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Scribner; Advance Reader's Edition (May 3, 2022)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 432 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1982181478
- ISBN-13 : 978-1982181475
- Item Weight : 1.2 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 1.4 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #864,056 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #2,758 in Cultural Heritage Fiction
- #12,430 in Family Life Fiction (Books)
- #40,314 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Monica Ali is a bestselling writer whose work has been translated into 26 languages. She is the author of five books: Brick Lane, Alentejo Blue, In the Kitchen, Untold Story and Love Marriage. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and in 2003 was named as one of Granta’s Best of Young British Novelists. She has been nominated for, amongst others, the Booker Prize, the George Orwell Prize, the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize and in the U.S. has been a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. She has taught creative writing at Columbia University, New York, where she was a visiting Professor, and from 2015 to 2018 she was Distinguished Writer in Residence at the University of Surrey.
Brick Lane was turned into a feature film produced by Film Four, starring Tannishtha Chatterjee, directed by Sarah Gavron and written by Abi Morgan. Monica is currently adapting her fifth novel, Love Marriage, for television.
Monica is Patron of Hopscotch Women’s Centre, a charity that was originally set up by Save the Children to support ethnic minority families who had come to join their partners in the UK. The organisation became independent in 1998 and continues to empower women and girls to achieve their full potential.
website: monicaali.com
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the characters interesting and human. They describe the book as personal and superbly told. However, some readers feel the writing style is dull and clichéd, putting them to sleep.
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Customers find the characters interesting and the multicultural setting engaging. They also appreciate the hopeful and humane outcomes.
"...The storytelling is superb, the characters very real and the writing is great." Read more
"...not be more appropriate for this book, but the outcomes hopeful and human in that some people are always striving to overcome any difficulties they..." Read more
"Funny, wise, and tender, with a cast of flawed and beautiful characters...." Read more
"Interesting characters and the multi cultural setting and the topic is somewhat interesting. Yet not a book that enthused me" Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book. Some find it interesting and personal, with superb storytelling and real characters. Others feel it's boring, repetitive, and pointless.
"...The storytelling is superb, the characters very real and the writing is great." Read more
"I am still reading it. Very interesting up to now." Read more
"...It was so cliché filled and boring. I only made it half way through, thinking it’s got to get better, but then I finally gave up when it didn’t...." Read more
"...A superbly written chronicle of the subject premise...." Read more
Customers have different views on the writing style. Some find the characters realistic and the writing great, while others feel the storyline is dull and clichéd.
"...The storytelling is superb, the characters very real and the writing is great." Read more
"...The scenes with the therapist are very heavy handed. The prose is too on the nose...." Read more
"...and the problems they face and how they deal with them that is well written and plotted...." Read more
"Not Brick Lane, which I loved. This was boring, tedious. Way too long. Stopped at the 2/3 mark." Read more
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We’ll-Written Family Drama
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 14, 2022I loved this book. I have not read a book lately that captivated me, so was very happy this one did. The storytelling is superb, the characters very real and the writing is great.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 28, 2022I am still reading it. Very interesting up to now.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2022I think this is one of the best lines pen ever put to paper. Of course that pen was only the instrument that translate the thoughts of Monica Ali. A superbly written chronicle of the subject premise. A moving story of the impact people and events have on people and how family plays an integral role on everyone's life.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 29, 2022A book about humans and the problems they face and how they deal with them that is well written and plotted. I found the characters and the problems they faced realistic and the outcomes fortunate. The poet’s line about parents and children could not be more appropriate for this book, but the outcomes hopeful and human in that some people are always striving to overcome any difficulties they face. That is probably the only unrealistic thing in the book in that some people do not and the problem damages them, their life, and then others. I guess, having something hopeful and optimistic is better.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 26, 2022Thank you to Scribner and GoodReads Giveaways for the review copy of Monica Ali’s Love Marriage.
In Love Marriage, Yasmin, a young, British-Muslim doctor whose parents emigrated from India, is in the middle of her residency in a geriatric unit. If that's not enough, Yasmin is also engaged, living at home with her strict parents and her adult, out of work brother. Her fiancé, Joe, another young doctor, also lives with his mother. At the beginning of the book, Yasmine thinks that she understands her family and her fiancé, she even believes that she understands herself.
As Yasmin sees things, her mother spends her time caring for her family and her elderly neighbors, cooking, helping run errands, and accumulating other’s cast-off possessions from rummage sales. Her father is an austere doctor who challenges her with case studies to identify diagnoses. Her brother cannot seem to find a job and stays in his room when he is not staying with his girlfriend or wasting time on his hobby of making documentaries. Her fiancé is close to perfect, and his mother, Harriet, was a pioneering feminist and is still well-regarded. She wants to do right by her patients and everyone else. When the dinner where her parents will meet Harriet arrives, Yasmin is terrified that her parents will embarrass her in front of moneyed and sophisticated Harriet. She thinks that this is her biggest problem.
She plans her life around her impending marriage as though moving out of the house will solve all her problems. But as Yasmin believes that she has everyone pinned down, one after another, those close to her, especially her family, fail to maintain her narrow understanding of them.
While Yasmin is clearly the center of the story, Harriet and Joe’s therapist also have chapters attached to them. Through Harriet, we see another view of Yasmin and her fiancé and another female experience. To Yasmin, Harriet's openness about her personal life is the antithesis of her own family.
Through Joe’s therapist, we learn that he has a secret that he is afraid to tell Yasmin but which could have a large impact on their marriage. The therapist sees the fiancé as a textbook case, waiting and leading him to a psychological epiphany.
The book is very clear to point out Yasmin’s youth and naivete, and it seems, at times, to be too obvious. By the end of the novel I did not like her nearly as much as I liked her at the beginning. She is self-absorbed and unable to see how complicated and nuanced everyone else’s life is. Another character tells her that she has a “mean streak” and I cannot help but agree.
Would I teach Love Marriage? I can see teaching this novel as part of a contemporary literature class or perhaps reading it as part of a novel writing class. The plot is rather slow, as is true with many literary novels, but as Yasmin also learns, the characters have great depth. However, I am not sure how much I would enjoy reading the book again. Although the characters are richly drawn, I do not really want to spend more time with them.
4.0 out of 5 starsThank you to Scribner and GoodReads Giveaways for the review copy of Monica Ali’s Love Marriage.We’ll-Written Family Drama
Reviewed in the United States on August 26, 2022
In Love Marriage, Yasmin, a young, British-Muslim doctor whose parents emigrated from India, is in the middle of her residency in a geriatric unit. If that's not enough, Yasmin is also engaged, living at home with her strict parents and her adult, out of work brother. Her fiancé, Joe, another young doctor, also lives with his mother. At the beginning of the book, Yasmine thinks that she understands her family and her fiancé, she even believes that she understands herself.
As Yasmin sees things, her mother spends her time caring for her family and her elderly neighbors, cooking, helping run errands, and accumulating other’s cast-off possessions from rummage sales. Her father is an austere doctor who challenges her with case studies to identify diagnoses. Her brother cannot seem to find a job and stays in his room when he is not staying with his girlfriend or wasting time on his hobby of making documentaries. Her fiancé is close to perfect, and his mother, Harriet, was a pioneering feminist and is still well-regarded. She wants to do right by her patients and everyone else. When the dinner where her parents will meet Harriet arrives, Yasmin is terrified that her parents will embarrass her in front of moneyed and sophisticated Harriet. She thinks that this is her biggest problem.
She plans her life around her impending marriage as though moving out of the house will solve all her problems. But as Yasmin believes that she has everyone pinned down, one after another, those close to her, especially her family, fail to maintain her narrow understanding of them.
While Yasmin is clearly the center of the story, Harriet and Joe’s therapist also have chapters attached to them. Through Harriet, we see another view of Yasmin and her fiancé and another female experience. To Yasmin, Harriet's openness about her personal life is the antithesis of her own family.
Through Joe’s therapist, we learn that he has a secret that he is afraid to tell Yasmin but which could have a large impact on their marriage. The therapist sees the fiancé as a textbook case, waiting and leading him to a psychological epiphany.
The book is very clear to point out Yasmin’s youth and naivete, and it seems, at times, to be too obvious. By the end of the novel I did not like her nearly as much as I liked her at the beginning. She is self-absorbed and unable to see how complicated and nuanced everyone else’s life is. Another character tells her that she has a “mean streak” and I cannot help but agree.
Would I teach Love Marriage? I can see teaching this novel as part of a contemporary literature class or perhaps reading it as part of a novel writing class. The plot is rather slow, as is true with many literary novels, but as Yasmin also learns, the characters have great depth. However, I am not sure how much I would enjoy reading the book again. Although the characters are richly drawn, I do not really want to spend more time with them.
Images in this review
- Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2023I thought I knew what this book was about after a few chapters. I was wrong. Then I was wrong again. This touching and complex story was incredibly engaging and intersectional, wrapped up in romance novel paper.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2024Book club selection
- Reviewed in the United States on May 3, 20224.5 Stars
This is a story of a family, a husband and wife, a Bengali couple, who emigrated from Kolkata to live in London, where they raise their son, and daughter, Yasmin.
As this begins, Yasmin is a trainee doctor engaged to Joe, a coworker, and she is getting ready for a dinner with her future in-laws, with her parents accompanying so that the families can meet and discuss the yet-unscheduled-but-upcoming wedding. Joe’s mother relies on caterers, whereas Yasmin’s mother, Anisah, is determined to bring some home cooking to the affair, much to Yasmin’s dismay.
Joe’s parents live in a more exclusive area in a much larger home than Yasmin’s family, and Joe’s mother, Harriet, is...more progressive. A former model who achieved some notoriety for posing nude back in the 70’s, Harriet is an academic who considers herself a liberal, loves to entertain the educated, more ‘cultured’ and well-read set.
A story that covers a lot of territory, perhaps too much, which left me wondering what other readers would make of it. It flits here and there, a man who seems unable to be faithful to one woman, who seems to prefer finding and trying out women the way one might check out different restaurants. Not necessarily looking for a better meal, per se, just a different one. A young woman who struggles with the career she’s worked so hard for, but is no longer sure what - or who - she wants. A father whose life seems to have fallen apart, a son who is taking a path that feels too impulsive, ridiculous and dangerous to his parents. A wife that has decided that enough is enough. A friendship that forms between the future two mother-in-laws that adds fuel to the fire. Oh, yes, and sex.
There’s a lot going on in this story, varying points of view, which added to the larger, sometimes trying, sometimes fascinating, picture in progress. Fortunately, although it covers multiple storylines, it is at heart Yasmin’s story. How her view of the trajectory her life is taking makes her realize what she truly wants may not be what she thought, especially after secrets are exposed, and lies withheld force her to examine what she really wants.
’Life is not simple.’ A phrase emphasizing a simple truth is often repeated. Life takes twists and turns, and our lives are often upended.
A story of the complex nature of relationships, sex, faith, family, and - perhaps especially - of love - in all its many forms.
Many thanks for the ARC provided by Scribner
Top reviews from other countries
- RlovesbooksReviewed in Germany on April 28, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Nice
It started a nutlike a typical Indian family story living in England, but it becomes very interesting....
- Mystery FanReviewed in India on September 12, 2022
4.0 out of 5 stars What's Love and What's Marriage?
Monica Ali's 'Love Marriage,' a sprawling novel shortlisted for the Booker Prize, is about Shaoket and his wife Anisah, Bengali Muslims from Kolkata who immigrated to the UK, and their two London-born children. The daughter and main character Yasmin Ghorami is training to be a doctor, specialising in geriatrics. Her father, also a doctor, encourages and even expects her to take up the profession just as he has signposted his expectations for his son; Arif, though, to his father's great displeasure, chooses to go his own way.
Yasmin is engaged to Joe Sangster and the first part of the novel builds up for the tense first meeting between the two families at the large Sangster home in an exclusive area of London. Yasmin's mother Anisah has cooked a whole range of her favourite Bengali dishes and they arrive at Joe's home with a car full of food. Instead of the supercilious disdain that Yasmin feared from Joe’s upper-class and divorced mother, Harriet, she welcomes them warmly and unexpectedly finds kinship with Anisah.
Questions start to arise. Why is Joe seeing a therapist? Why is Yasmin exploring her sexuality outside her relationship with Joe? Why does Anisah move to Harriet’s house and what bonds her to Harriet’s female friend Flame? How did Shaoket, the son of a driver, get to wed middle-class Anisah? How close was Harriet to Joe when he was growing up?
In the second part of the book, layers are peeled away to reveal answers. The pivotal point is when Arif’s girlfriend Lucy delivers a baby girl. This brings together Anisah, Yasmin and Arif and when the baby develops an illness that doctors are unable to diagnose or treat, it takes Shaoket to suggest a cause.
A fascinating book, all 432 pages of its 94 chapters. Well worth reading.
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in Italy on August 2, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars illuminating
An illuminating book from Ali Smith. At first i was put off by the tagline ‘booker prize’ as i thought it would be difficult and hard. But it s light, rises gently from the starter dough and develops into a gloriously rich, aromatic complex crusty story that provides real insight into different people s life experiences.
- RocollReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 8, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars A Tour de Force
This book encompasses quite a lot, but essentially, it’s about sex. It isn’t titillating by any means, but it’s about the role of sex within relationships, culture, power structures. Essentially a story about Yasmin and her fiancé, Joe who have become engaged within five months of dating each other. But Joe is a sex addict and he’s unfaithful, sending their relationship into an agonisingly long tailspin of self-discovery for both of them.
Although the reasons for Joe’s addiction are fascinating as outlined in the therapist sessions he has, the most interesting aspect of this is Yasmin’s reaction. And this is really the cleverest part of Ali’s writing: because Yasmin is not a likeable character. She’s real and flawed, immature, solipsistic, dutiful, caring, reckless, absolutely sure that she’s right (until she’s not). It’s such a complex, tour de force of a character study with an added layer of being a British Muslim woman - treated refreshingly with the contrast of her friend, Rania. In many ways, reading Yasmin was uncomfortable, bringing back memories of my youth when I thought I knew everything, but in reality had experienced so little of life, I couldn’t possibly have.
Then there’s Harriet - her character sometimes veered towards caricature, but it worked. Her intense love for her son, her lack of boundaries, her liberal views, were balanced with the reasons for all of this. Where we think she’s patronising Yasmin’s mother, Anisah, she’s actually in awe of the woman.
Finally, Anisah - I felt her longing for a life beyond her little home in Tatton Hill, her need to spread her wings, her joy, her sorrow. My goodness, her sorrow - I cried.
Despite it’s length, the book is a propulsive read, plunging you into these people’s lives, making you care for them, rooting for them. A rare accomplishment in literary fiction. And it’s funny. Ali skewers so many aspects of middle class society, particularly the publishing industry and their treatment of BIPOC writers.
Read it, you won’t regret it.
- Cathleen JayReviewed in Australia on May 2, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars My book gift choice for friends.
Why have I not read Monica Ali before?
I am starting on her earlier novels and from now on I will be reading everything she writes.
Love marriage is one of the most engaging novels I have read for years. I loved all the characters - warts and all - and cared mightily about what would happen to all of them.
Monica Ali is a wonderful writer. She is clever, hilarious and a brilliant plotter.
This book had me sometimes laughing out loud, and at other times shedding tears. What a page turner.
It is the book I am buying this year when I am looking for gifts for friends.