'beautifully drawn...a pleasant read'.
Tribune
'The story feels quiet and polite but it resonates. Superb.'
Evening Standard
'Chaudhuri plunders Ulysses and The Odyssey, joyfully borrowing from both iconic Western texts to create something fresh and new.'
Sunday Herald
'Intelligent and funny'
London Review of Books
'very funny'
New Humanist
`A brilliantly delicate London novel… an absolutely wonderful book’
The Idler
'Easily followed and lucidly expressed… Amit Chaudhuri is on top form’
The Lady
`A beautifully written novel that weaves in Indian history with a fabulously observed portrait of 1980s migrant London’
Metro
`Gentle, restrained’
Prospect
`Richly allusive… It is not the novel’s plot, but its rhythmic prose, interwoven with musical and poetical references, that most engages… a witty narrative filled with wandering and wondering’
Observer
`Chaudhuri is incisive and humorous on the experience of moving from a former colony to Eighties London… Some small details particularly thrill’
Daily Telegraph
`very elegant… Amit Chaudhuri is a master of the slow-moving meditation, laced with precise exasperation… very funny… For all the jokes about literature this is a most literary novel. Yet it is witty, effortlessly fluid… a pleasure to read… sustained by a fierce intelligence’
Irish Times
`Rhadesh’s attempts to assimilate into English culture are funny and he clearly enjoys strange English customs… Like Homer and Joyce, Chaudhuri is good at writing about food’
Herald
`Delightfully witty… luminously intelligent… Odysseus Abroad has placed itself, with erudition and playfulness, on the map of modernism’
- Neel Mukherjee, Guardian
`In the eccentric Radhesh, Chaudhuri gives us something special… a little gem not to be missed’
Daily Mail
`A stunningly engaging novel where Naipaul meets Amis and Joyce visits Thatcher's England. Wittingly inventive, deeply moving, it's Chaudhuri’s finest work to date.’
- Caryl Phillips,
'A superb book, one of Chaudhuri’s very best -- full of wit, charm and humanity, and so delicately and intricately written.’
- Ian Jack,
`The stunning, Proustian prose that we have come to expect of Amit Chaudhuri is here in abundance, newly enhanced with surreal comedy and wry, self-mocking, often hilarious sex. Brilliantly he superimposes an intensely Bengali sensibility upon the picaresque experience of a London undergraduate. This is his wittiest and also his most profound book to date.’
- Wendy Doniger,