2+2=20 (The Corporate Maths) By Anurag Sharma

2+2=20 (The Corporate Maths) By Anurag Sharma is a witty, honest satire of corporate life that exposes office politics, toxic bosses, fake urgency, and the everyday absurdities employees silently endure.

A satirical mirror to modern corporate life

Book Details

DetailInformation
Title2+2=20 (The Corporate Maths)
AuthorAnurag Sharma
LanguageEnglish
Print Length154 pages
Publication Date20 December 2025
Buy Linkhttps://amzn.in/d/eKnUgk9

Introduction

What if logic stopped mattering the moment you entered an office? What if facts, numbers, and common sense bent themselves to hierarchy rather than truth? 2+2=20 (The Corporate Maths) answers these questions with sharp humour and uncomfortable honesty.

Written by Chartered Accountant Anurag Sharma, this book is not a guide to corporate success or a motivational manual. Instead, it is a brutally funny, deeply relatable exploration of how corporate life actually feels for those living inside it.

A Satire Rooted in Reality

At its core, this book works because it is grounded in lived experience. The stories feel familiar because they are familiar. From fake urgency to endless Excel sheets that magically create profits, from office politics to performative leadership, every chapter reflects a reality most professionals quietly endure.

The title itself sets the tone. In the corporate world, 2 + 2 does not equal 4. It equals whatever the boss says it does. Logic is optional. Agreement is mandatory.

Characters and Moments That Hit Close to Home

One of the book’s most memorable elements is its cast of exaggerated yet believable characters. The standout is Mrs. P, the Queen of Corporate Hell, a boss who feels like a composite of every toxic manager employees have ever survived.

Alongside her are colleagues who bootlick to survive, managers who confuse quotes with leadership, and systems that punish honesty while rewarding silence. These characters are not villains in a traditional sense. They are symptoms of a broken culture.

Themes That Go Beyond Humour

While the book delivers consistent laughs, it also quietly explores deeper themes. Burnout, mental exhaustion, fake positivity, and the pressure to conform run beneath the humour.

The author does not preach solutions. Instead, he offers something more honest: recognition. The book validates the frustration professionals feel when systems reward appearances over outcomes and obedience over intelligence.

It also reinforces subtle but powerful lessons about boundaries, sanity, and knowing when not every battle is worth fighting.

Writing Style and Structure

The writing is crisp, conversational, and accessible. Short chapters make it easy to read during breaks between meetings or commutes. The humour is sharp without being cruel, observational rather than exaggerated for effect.

Importantly, the book never feels like a rant. It reads like a conversation with a colleague who finally says out loud what everyone else is thinking.

Who Should Read This Book

This book is ideal for corporate professionals, freshers, MBAs, CAs, consultants, and anyone who has ever worked in an office or is about to. It is especially resonant for those who feel trapped between ambition and exhaustion.

If you have ever laughed at something painful just to survive the workday, this book will feel uncomfortably familiar.

Why This Book Matters

2+2=20 (The Corporate Maths) matters because it gives language to experiences that are often dismissed as normal. By laughing at corporate absurdity, the book creates space for reflection.

It reminds readers that sanity matters, that not every system deserves blind loyalty, and that sometimes survival is about choosing peace over pointless logic.

Conclusion

This is not a book about climbing the corporate ladder. It is about staying human while standing on it.

With wit, honesty, and insight, Anurag Sharma captures the strange arithmetic of corporate life where numbers bend, truths blur, and survival often matters more than sense. For readers looking to laugh, reflect, and feel seen, 2+2=20 (The Corporate Maths) delivers exactly that.

Read More : Review : Whispers of the Soul By Yogesh Arvind Puranik

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