Mouni is twenty-five and single. She works for an Indian software company and spends a monotonous life of sleeping, eating and going to office, till she starts working with her client Sam from the US. They have not seen each other, but they cannot deny the pull they feel towards each other. When they finally meet, both of them fall head over heels in love with each other. Yet, both of them are too proud to accept it and believe the other is too good looking for their benefit.
As these two so-called mature, independent and logical human beings embark on a confusing and hilarious journey peppered with many disastrous and impulsive incidents to discover themselves– they grow and mature in each other’s love. But fate has a different plan.
A thoughtful decision goes wrong and Mouni ends up facing a lawsuit for cybercrime.
Standing at a juncture of life where everything looks doomed, Mouni has no self-confidence and fears it is too late for their relationship to work again.
However, Sam has a different agenda. Will the two of them be able to finally get together...?
Rajrupa Gupta holds a Bachelor of Technology degree in Computer Science & Engineering from CEMK and is a Software Engineer by profession. The crazy Algorithm of love is her debut novel. An avid reader and a passionate blogger, she has always enjoyed writing. Her dream is writing stories that readers would fall in love with, which she put on hold for her career and relationship. Now that she has reached a stable point in both, she wants to explore her first love writing, again. She maintains a blog where she hones her skill of storytelling, which her readers love. She presently lives in Chennai with her husband, who is also a software engineer by profession. She also enjoys photography and cooking.
Romance is definitely NOT my favorite genre of all time, but I do love reading stories as long as they don't have a lot of mush. This book does that. The story is simple, so is Rajrupa Gupta's language. The characters are sketched well, and the book isn't a drag. Loved it.