product
5038054The True Happiness Companyhttps://www.gandhi.com.mx/the-true-happiness-company-9780593909041/phttps://gandhi.vtexassets.com/arquivos/ids/4584056/image.jpg?v=638787339658270000387387MXNPenguin Random House Audio Publishing GroupInStock/Audiolibros/<p><strong>A LILLYS LIBRARY BOOK CLUB PICK In this darkly humorous and wrenchingly sincere memoir, a young Indian American womans dreams of being a well-adjusted college student get wildly derailed when her struggles with mental health land her in the office of a charismatic alternative therapist and his self-help cult.</strong></p><p><strong>Honest, brutal, funny, fascinating. A vital reminder of how important it is to trust ourselves.Jenny Lawson, <em>New York Times</em> bestselling author of <em>Lets Pretend This Never Happened</em> and <em>Furiously Happy</em></strong></p><p><strong>Veena Dinavahi is a ferocious writer with a poetic left hook.Bethany Joy Lenz, <em>New York Times</em> bestselling author of <em>Dinner for Vampires</em></strong></p><p>It is hard for Veena Dinavahi to live while her classmates keep dying. The high-achieving daughter of loving Indian immigrants, Veena lives in a typical white American suburbexcept for its unusually high suicide rate. For years, she tries to manage her mental health in all the right ways, but nothing seems to work. Until, on a late-night Google search, Veenas mom discovers Bob Lyona sixty-year-old white man in the backwoods of Georgia who claims he can make her want to live again. He calls himself The True Happiness Company and, as their relationship progresses, Daddy. Veena becomes increasingly enveloped in his strangely close-knit community, and before she knows it, shes a college dropout, married mother of three, and Mormon convert who has gotten way too good at dismissing her gut feeling that something is wrong. But when Veenas treatment goes too far, she slowly begins to question whether true happiness can even exist as an absolute.</p><p>In this revelatory debut, Veena traces the contours of her life to explore the question that plagued her in the years afterward: <em>how did I fall for that</em>? And what will it mean to move forward?</p><p>Told with unflinching clarity and shot through with incisive wit, <em>The True Happiness Company</em> is Veena Dinavahis singular exploration of what it means to lose and reclaim your identity, rethink mental illness, and learn to trust your intuition in a world determined to annihilate it.</p>...4768836The True Happiness Company387387https://www.gandhi.com.mx/the-true-happiness-company-9780593909041/phttps://gandhi.vtexassets.com/arquivos/ids/4584056/image.jpg?v=638787339658270000InStockMXN99999DIAudiolibro20259780593909041_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9780593909041_<p><strong>In this wrenching, darkly funny memoir, a young Indian American womans quest for mental health is derailed by a charismatic alternative therapist who pulls her into his Mormon self-help cult.</strong></p><p>It is hard for Veena Dinavahi to live while her classmates keep dying. The high-achieving daughter of loving Indian immigrants, she lives in a white American suburb like any otherexcept for its unusually high suicide rate. Veena tries everything to cure her own depression, but nothing works. Then, on one late-night Google search, her mom finds Bob Lyona sixty-year-old man in the backwoods of Georgia who says he can make Veena want to live again. He calls himself The True Happiness Company and, as their relationship progresses . . . Daddy.</p><p>As Veena is sucked into his strangely close-knit community, Bobs suggestions start to feel less and less optional. Before she knows it, shes a college dropout, a married mother of three, and a Mormon convert who has gotten way too good at dismissing her gut feeling that something is wrong. But when Bob finally pushes her too far, Veena knows she has to cut ties with him. Driven to understand her journey, she re-enrolls in college, studies psychology, and begins to understand that true happiness cannot be one-size-fits-all.</p><p>Told with unflinching clarity and shot through with incisive wit, <em>The True Happiness Company</em> is a singular tale of learning to trust your intuition in a world determined to annihilate it.</p>...(*_*)9780593909041_<p><strong>In this darkly humorous and wrenchingly sincere memoir, a young Indian American womans dreams of being a well-adjusted college student get wildly derailed when her struggles with mental health land her in the office of a charismatic alternative therapist and his self-help cult.</strong></p><p>It is hard for Veena Dinavahi to live while her classmates keep dying. The high-achieving daughter of loving Indian immigrants, Veena lives in a typical white American suburbexcept for its unusually high suicide rate. For years, she tries to manage her mental health in all the right ways, but nothing seems to work. Until, on a late-night Google search, Veenas mom discovers Bob Lyona sixty-year-old white man in the backwoods of Georgia who claims he can make her want to live again. He calls himself The True Happiness Company and, as their relationship progresses, Daddy. Veena becomes increasingly enveloped in his strangely close-knit community, and before she knows it, shes a college dropout, married mother of three, and Mormon convert who has gotten way too good at dismissing her gut feeling that something is wrong. But when Veenas treatment goes too far, she slowly begins to question whether true happiness can even exist as an absolute.</p><p>In this revelatory debut, Veena traces the contours of her life to explore the question that plagued her in the years afterward: <em>how did I fall for that</em>? And what will it mean to move forward?</p><p>Told with unflinching clarity and shot through with incisive wit, <em>The True Happiness Company</em> is Veena Dinavahis singular exploration of what it means to lose and reclaim your identity, rethink mental illness, and learn to trust your intuition in a world determined to annihilate it.</p>...(*_*)9780593909041_<p><strong>In this darkly humorous and wrenchingly sincere memoir, a young Indian American womans dreams of being a well-adjusted college student get wildly derailed when her struggles with mental health land her in the office of a charismatic alternative therapist and his self-help cult.</strong></p><p><strong>Honest, brutal, funny, fascinating. A vital reminder of how important it is to trust ourselves.Jenny Lawson, <em>New York Times</em> bestselling author of <em>Lets Pretend This Never Happened</em> and <em>Furiously Happy</em></strong></p><p><strong>Veena Dinavahi is a ferocious writer with a poetic left hook.Bethany Joy Lopez, <em>New York Times</em> bestselling author of <em>Dinner for Vampires</em></strong></p><p>It is hard for Veena Dinavahi to live while her classmates keep dying. The high-achieving daughter of loving Indian immigrants, Veena lives in a typical white American suburbexcept for its unusually high suicide rate. For years, she tries to manage her mental health in all the right ways, but nothing seems to work. Until, on a late-night Google search, Veenas mom discovers Bob Lyona sixty-year-old white man in the backwoods of Georgia who claims he can make her want to live again. He calls himself The True Happiness Company and, as their relationship progresses, Daddy. Veena becomes increasingly enveloped in his strangely close-knit community, and before she knows it, shes a college dropout, married mother of three, and Mormon convert who has gotten way too good at dismissing her gut feeling that something is wrong. But when Veenas treatment goes too far, she slowly begins to question whether true happiness can even exist as an absolute.</p><p>In this revelatory debut, Veena traces the contours of her life to explore the question that plagued her in the years afterward: <em>how did I fall for that</em>? And what will it mean to move forward?</p><p>Told with unflinching clarity and shot through with incisive wit, <em>The True Happiness Company</em> is Veena Dinavahis singular exploration of what it means to lose and reclaim your identity, rethink mental illness, and learn to trust your intuition in a world determined to annihilate it.</p>...(*_*)9780593909041_<p><strong>In this darkly humorous and wrenchingly sincere memoir, a young Indian American womans dreams of being a well-adjusted college student get wildly derailed when her struggles with mental health land her in the office of a charismatic alternative therapist and his self-help cult.</strong></p><p><strong>Honest, brutal, funny, fascinating. A vital reminder of how important it is to trust ourselves.Jenny Lawson, <em>New York Times</em> bestselling author of <em>Lets Pretend This Never Happened</em> and <em>Furiously Happy</em></strong></p><p><strong>Veena Dinavahi is a ferocious writer with a poetic left hook.Bethany Joy Lenz, <em>New York Times</em> bestselling author of <em>Dinner for Vampires</em></strong></p><p>It is hard for Veena Dinavahi to live while her classmates keep dying. The high-achieving daughter of loving Indian immigrants, Veena lives in a typical white American suburbexcept for its unusually high suicide rate. For years, she tries to manage her mental health in all the right ways, but nothing seems to work. Until, on a late-night Google search, Veenas mom discovers Bob Lyona sixty-year-old white man in the backwoods of Georgia who claims he can make her want to live again. He calls himself The True Happiness Company and, as their relationship progresses, Daddy. Veena becomes increasingly enveloped in his strangely close-knit community, and before she knows it, shes a college dropout, married mother of three, and Mormon convert who has gotten way too good at dismissing her gut feeling that something is wrong. But when Veenas treatment goes too far, she slowly begins to question whether true happiness can even exist as an absolute.</p><p>In this revelatory debut, Veena traces the contours of her life to explore the question that plagued her in the years afterward: <em>how did I fall for that</em>? And what will it mean to move forward?</p><p>Told with unflinching clarity and shot through with incisive wit, <em>The True Happiness Company</em> is Veena Dinavahis singular exploration of what it means to lose and reclaim your identity, rethink mental illness, and learn to trust your intuition in a world determined to annihilate it.</p>...(*_*)9780593909041_<p><strong>A LILLYS LIBRARY BOOK CLUB PICK In this darkly humorous and wrenchingly sincere memoir, a young Indian American womans dreams of being a well-adjusted college student get wildly derailed when her struggles with mental health land her in the office of a charismatic alternative therapist and his self-help cult.</strong></p><p><strong>Honest, brutal, funny, fascinating. A vital reminder of how important it is to trust ourselves.Jenny Lawson, <em>New York Times</em> bestselling author of <em>Lets Pretend This Never Happened</em> and <em>Furiously Happy</em></strong></p><p><strong>Veena Dinavahi is a ferocious writer with a poetic left hook.Bethany Joy Lenz, <em>New York Times</em> bestselling author of <em>Dinner for Vampires</em></strong></p><p>It is hard for Veena Dinavahi to live while her classmates keep dying. The high-achieving daughter of loving Indian immigrants, Veena lives in a typical white American suburbexcept for its unusually high suicide rate. For years, she tries to manage her mental health in all the right ways, but nothing seems to work. Until, on a late-night Google search, Veenas mom discovers Bob Lyona sixty-year-old white man in the backwoods of Georgia who claims he can make her want to live again. He calls himself The True Happiness Company and, as their relationship progresses, Daddy. Veena becomes increasingly enveloped in his strangely close-knit community, and before she knows it, shes a college dropout, married mother of three, and Mormon convert who has gotten way too good at dismissing her gut feeling that something is wrong. But when Veenas treatment goes too far, she slowly begins to question whether true happiness can even exist as an absolute.</p><p>In this revelatory debut, Veena traces the contours of her life to explore the question that plagued her in the years afterward: <em>how did I fall for that</em>? And what will it mean to move forward?</p><p>Told with unflinching clarity and shot through with incisive wit, <em>The True Happiness Company</em> is Veena Dinavahis singular exploration of what it means to lose and reclaim your identity, rethink mental illness, and learn to trust your intuition in a world determined to annihilate it.</p>...9780593909041_Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Groupaudiolibro_9780593909041_9780593909041Veena DinavahiInglésMéxico2025-05-20T00:00:00+00:00NoMINUTE2025-05-20T00:00:00+00:00Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group