"Château Rouge is a true romance. Chaudhuri's Paris beguiles precisely by refusing to seek approval, to charm, to conform to expectations. And the same is true of this graceful novel, so stubbornly, surprisingly, gorgeously itself. On these uncharted streets and pages, a peculiar magic starts to happen. I don’t quite know how he’s done it—but I love it." —Clare Carlisle
"With each of his novels, Amit Chaudhuri has managed to reinvent himself without ever compromising the essential pleasures of his fiction, which collapses every possible distinction between interiority and description and transforms the act of contemplation into high drama. In Château Rouge, Chaudhuri again delivers something beautiful and new. A richly textured novel that decenters Paris even as it pays careful attention to the way the city looks and feels today—right now—Château Rouge unites city symphony, psychogeography, and psychological acuity as only Chaudhuri can. I've loved Chaudhuri's writing for years, but thanks to Château Rouge I've discovered new altitudes of admiration." —Mark Krotov
"[Château Rouge] dwells on brief contacts in the Paris that is not the City of Light but rather a city of immigrants who live and work around the metro stop, Château Rouge . . . It is a novel in fragments, assembled from glimpses, an eternal present of sensations, culture discernible in what the eyes and ears find arresting." —Michael Autrey, Booklist
"[Chaudhuri's] very measured, almost poetic prose, which evokes more than it narrates, and the austere economy of his novels, which are one fourth the size of an average Indian novel, make him distinctive: here is a painter not of large and garish Indian murals, but of portraits in miniature of everyday life." —Pankaj Mishra, The New York Review of Books
"Chaudhuri has only one of the novelist’s qualifications, but he has it in abundance . . . he is in love with life, and with people, and he can communicate this love directly and unsentimentally. Nothing is too small or too boring for him: he defamiliarises the everyday, reinvigorates the ordinary, and makes the humdrum seem exciting." —Jonathan Coe, London Review of Books