Moneycontrol
HomeNewsTrendsLifestyleBook review: Afterness: Home and Away by former HUL chairman Ashok S. Ganguly is a frank autobiography with a dash of humour
Trending Topics

Book review: Afterness: Home and Away by former HUL chairman Ashok S. Ganguly is a frank autobiography with a dash of humour

Read this book to learn about HUL's Ashok Ganguly’s hilarious experiences with job interviews, his work at Unilever, and the frustration he experienced as a nominated Rajya Sabha member.

November 27, 2022 / 14:28 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

Ashok Ganguly served as chairman of HUL from 1980-90. (Image: Afterness cover image/Penguin)

Ashok S. Ganguly, who was the chairman of Hindustan Lever Limited from 1980 to 1990, and a member of the Unilever board from 1990 to 1997, has chronicled his professional and personal journeys in an absorbing memoir titled Afterness: Home and Away (Ebury Press, 2022). The book spans eight decades of his eventful life in India and elsewhere. For those who are curious about the title, Ganguly explains that afterness refers to “the misty musings of a lifetime, near the end of the innings, the joys and sadness, people and events, looking back, just that, only once!”

Ganguly’s recollections of his childhood in Bombay (now Mumbai) are marked by nostalgia and self-deprecatory humour. He was not particularly interested in studies but enjoyed playing cricket with his friends. He writes sheepishly about the time when he was upset with his mother “after receiving a good thrashing…for some lapse” and decided to run away from home.

Story continues below Advertisement

He ended up whiling a few hours by the sea with fisher folk unloading fish from a boat. The boatmen invited him to take a dip in the sea with them. When his father reached the spot, he was basking in the sun after the dip and his undergarments were drying on the rocks. His father did not scold him. When they reached home, his mother welcomed him with a hug. Ganguly writes, “In retrospect, I am ashamed that I was not repentant of my behaviour, and secretly hoped Ma would be more careful in the future, scolding me or disciplining my wayward ways.”

It is refreshing to see the author – who has held board-level positions with British Airways, Wipro, Tata AIG Life Insurance Co., and Firstsource Solutions – opening up about incidents that might shock people who know him only for his expertise and have no clue about how mischievous he was as a child. On one occasion, he did not show his report card to his parents. He found the rubber block of his father’s signature facsimile, took an ink pad, and stamped the signature on his report card. He skipped classes at school, walked around the city, and smoked.