'Tushar has this instinctive ability to
hold your attention with narrative deviations that illuminate disparate
subjects ...the charm of campus life, pig-headed Professors,
the advantage of sisters, the adventure of train travel in India, the
joy of an early winter in Delhi ...What Raheja does is to
very cleverly localize the Wooster persona. So English aristocracy, the
idle rich, the lad sent down from Oxford, the young man with great
expectations and little ability, the chappie whose only survival tool
is a smart gentleman's gentleman called Jeeves - all this is turned
into rich material for humour of a local kind ...Some of the humour is
side splitting ...'
- The Hindu
'Remember Bertie Wooster? ...the humour -
most often arising out of situations poor Bertie gets himself into
...Anything for you, ma'am works on same lines ... Well, it would be
too presumptuous to compare a fourth year IIT student Tushar Raheja's
attempt at witty writing to a classic Wodehouse, but he does manage to
get some laughs ...a laugh-a-minute book ...'
- The Times of India
'Raheja writes a touching book about a young lover's
story ...that engrosses the reader, with its high speed
rather hilarious turn of events ...Amidst all the chaos are the sweet
love moments ...be it their date or their telephonic conversation ...It
is the story of a boy-next-door, which any youngster can relate to. Raheja
moves back and forth in time, reminding of ace writers like Virginia
Woolf and Amitav Ghosh ...'
- The Pioneer
'The difference lies in the treatment of the subject ...the
narrative is devoid of lofty idealism...the lingo and its
texture is very close to what students use in colleges ...a
good attempt by someone writing only his first novel ...'
- Hindustan Times
'Anything for you, ma'am is a delicacy of feelings
with dollops of mischief and fun ...Infused with the sepia
tinted fragrance of life at IIT Delhi campus and turbulent love terrain
of tweeny days, the book is for those who are romantics-at-hearts and
nostalgic about the good ol' college days ...'
- Society Magazine
'With all the masala of a Hindi movie, the story has
interesting plots, interspersed with humour, enough to keep you glued
to the pages ...'
- New Indian Express
'The author smears Tejas' life philosophy with a veneer of
middle-class respectability and manages to bolster the book with the
help of an extremely indulgent plot ...one must hand it to
the young author for an enterprising race to the finish ...'
- Deccan Herald
'The story takes many intriguing turns. It
has been penned in a language that is perfectly suitable for a story
placed against a campus background, perfectly setting the mood and
verisimilitude ...an enjoyable read ...'
- Seventeen
'As one goes through the book, there is just one feeling that
a reader gets. The feeling that a movie is being screened
before him, scene by scene ...'
- Vijay Times