soman chainani book tour

Soman Chainani Books In Order

Publication order of faraway books, publication order of the school for good and evil books, publication order of short story collections, publication order of anthologies.

Soman Chainani is a reputed American novelist and filmmaker, who is well known for writing children’s books and fantasy novels. He is particularly famous for his book series called The School for Good and Evil. This series’ first book with the same name made its debut on the bestselling list of the New York Times. It has been translated into as many as 27 languages and has been published across six continents, thereby making Chainani a popular name in the genre of children’s books. The book is also in talks to be adapted into a movie under the banner of Universal Pictures. Author Chainani has been hired by the production company to write the screenplay for the movie version of the story. For this purpose, he has been teamed up with Malia Scotch Marmo. Following the tremendous success of Chainani’s debut book, he added 4 more titles in the series. The second and third novels have also appeared on the NY Times Bestseller list. Altogether, the first three books have been on the extended bestseller list of the NY Times and on the print for over 30 weeks.

Chainani’s debut book series has fetched him a number of literary awards, accolades, and recognition. Author Chainani was born and brought up in Key Biscayne, Florida, United States. His family is among the few of the Indian descent living in the Key Biscayne area. Chainani has studied at Harvard University. He completed his graduation summa cum laude and earned his degree in English and American Literature. Following his graduation, he enrolled himself at the Columbia University for an MFA Program. Before beginning his career in the writing field, Chainani sought work in screenwriting and film direction. His films have played in more than 150 film festivals all over the world. The films have won over 30 audience and jury prizes.

Chainani has been honored with writing awards from the CAPE Foundation, Big Bear Lake, and New Draft. Chainani has received a Waterstone Prize nomination in the category of Children’s Literature and has featured in Out100. He has also received the Sun Valley Writers Fellowship and the Sasha Grant for debut authors, both amounting to $100,000 together. Currently, Chainani resides in New York City. He spends his time writing children’s stories and indulging himself in social activities in his spare time. He also works as a teacher. This profession takes up most of his daytime and leaves him only the evenings and nights to work on the development of his stories. During his school and college days, Chainani was an excellent player of tennis. He has played many competitive tournaments of the sport and won. But now, he hardly finds time to play tennis because of his writing and teaching commitments.

Author Chainani is a great believer in fairy tales. He even created his own fairy tale major during his days at Harvard. After his graduation, Chainani had plans to become a management consultant. But, things didn’t out the way he had expected and he ended up becoming a writer. Chainani considers himself lucky to have found the career field of writing as it has provided him success and satisfaction. His advice to upcoming writers is that they should pursue what they like other than writing because this field requires a lot of patience, hard work, and heartache. Chainani treats writing like a normal day job. He exercises in the morning and then sits down to write from 9 to 5. He keeps editing the chapters of his stories as he finishes them. Chainani expected to publish a new book very soon, which is going to be a part of his debut novel series. After that, he is expected to begin a new book series soon.

The School for Good and Evil series written by author Soman Chainani is comprised of a total of 5 books released between 2013 and 2019. Every book of this series revolves around the lives of Agatha and Sophie, who are middle-grade students and best friends. The series begins with a description that around 200 years ago, the children started getting kidnapped and sent to separate schools to get trained for becoming fairy tale villains and heroes. The schools are accordingly divided into Good & Evil. The kidnappings take place every year and only two kids are taken. One of them is always good and beautiful, while the other is usually an outcast, odd child. Such opposing pairs of kids get plucked from their youth ever year and spirited away.

The debut book of the series is entitled ‘The School for Good & Evil’. It was released in 2013. The book opens by depicting that Sophie and Agatha have been hearing about the kidnappings every year and they are about to know where they are sent. Being the most beautiful kid in all of Gavaldon, Sophie wishes to be taken to an enchanted world full of fantasies. She is determined to score good marks and graduate to become a fairy tale princess. On the other hand, Agatha doesn’t seem to fit for Good as she is disliked by everyone because of her wicked appearance. But, when the girls have finally swept away, they find that their fortunes have been reversed. Sophie gets dumped into the Evil School to undertake Death Curses, Henchmen Training, and Uglification, while Agatha is thrust in the Good School and finds herself among fair maidens and handsome princes to take classes in Animal Communication and Princess Etiquette.

Another exciting novel of the series is called ‘The Last Ever After’. It was published by HarperCollins in 2015. The main characters of this novel include Agatha, Lancelot du Lac, Sophie, ClarissaDovey, August Sader, Merlin, and others. The novel starts by showing that Sophie & Agatha go on separate paths after they complete their training in their respective Evil and Good schools. Agatha is told to stay with the beautiful School Master, while Sophie is ordered to return to Gavaldon. As the girls start settling into their modified lives, they head for a rewriting of their life’s story. Evil gets taken over by villains from the past, who intend to turn the world of Evil & Good upside down. The girls are not able to do anything for now as they are apart. It is only after they become aware of the situation that they arrive just in time and defeat the villains. This extraordinary book offers a journey filled with adventure, romance, action, twists & turns, and laughter.

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The School for Good and Evil: The Collector's Edition (School for Good and Evil, 1)

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Soman Chainani

The School for Good and Evil: The Collector's Edition (School for Good and Evil, 1) Hardcover – September 12, 2023

Purchase options and add-ons.

Celebrate ten years of adventures in the Endless Woods with this deluxe collector's edition of The School for Good and Evil by Soman Chainani! This edition includes a four-color reversible jacket and extensive new content from Soman featuring your favorite characters from the series.

The  New York Times  bestselling  The School for Good and Evil  is an epic journey into a dazzling new world, where the only way out of a fairy tale is to live through one. Start here to follow Sophie, Agatha, and everyone at school from the beginning!

With her glass slippers and devotion to good deeds, Sophie knows she'll earn top marks at the School for Good and join the ranks of past students like Cinderella, Rapunzel, and Snow White. Meanwhile, Agatha, with her shapeless black frocks and wicked black cat, seems a natural fit for the villains in the School for Evil.

The two girls soon find their fortunes reversed—Sophie's dumped in the School for Evil to take Uglification, Death Curses, and Henchmen Training, while Agatha finds herself in the School for Good, thrust among handsome princes and fair maidens for classes in Princess Etiquette and Animal Communication.

But what if the mistake is actually the first clue to discovering who Sophie and Agatha really are?

THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD AND EVIL is the #1 movie now streaming on Netflix—starring Academy Award winner Charlize Theron, Kerry Washington, Laurence Fishburne, Michelle Yeoh, Sofia Wylie, Sophie Anne Caruso, Jamie Flatters, Earl Cave, Kit Young, and many others!

  • Book 1 of 6 School for Good and Evil
  • Print length 512 pages
  • Language English
  • Grade level 3 - 6
  • Dimensions 5.75 x 1.5 x 8.5 inches
  • Publisher HarperCollins
  • Publication date September 12, 2023
  • ISBN-10 0063342340
  • ISBN-13 978-0063342347
  • See all details

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The School for Good and Evil #2: A World without Princes: Now a Netflix Originals Movie

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Editorial Reviews

Invention in overdrive…The School for Good and Evil is a comedic education by a writer primed to shoot to the head of the class. — Gregory Maguire, author of Wicked and Matchless

“Rich and strange.” — Kirkus Reviews

“A fairy tale like no other, complete with romance, magic, humor, and a riddle that will keep you turning pages until the end.” — Ann M. Martin, author of the bestselling Babysitter’s Club series

“Chainani has imagined the world where fairy tales come to life, where for every fairy princess with a ‘Happily Ever After’ in her future there is a villain with a tragic fate in store. But in The School for Good and Evil it’s not always certain which is which.” — David Magee, screenwriter of Life of Pi and Finding Neverland

“In Chainani’s richly imagined world the action never lets up for a nano-second. Young readers won’t be able to stop turning the pages till they reach the surprising and satisfying conclusion.” — Tor Seidler, author of Mean Margaret, a National Book Award Finalist

“Chainani takes the racing energy of Roald Dahl’s language and combines it with the existential intensity of J.K. Rowling’s plots to create his own universe. THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD AND EVIL uses the sorcery of words and the poetry of friendship to startle, enchant, and keep us turning pages.” — Maria Tatar, Chair of Folklore and Mythology Program, Harvard University and Editor of The Classic Fairy Tales

“Wow. From the very first sentence, you know you’re entering a thrilling world of strange fantasy... A wild and dangerous fairy tale ride. I loved this book.” — R. L. Stine, author of the bestselling Goosebumps series

“[A] whip-smart debut...If I could bewitch you all to read it, I would. Grade: A.” — Entertainment Weekly

About the Author

Soman Chainani' s six novels in the School for Good and Evil series each debuted on the New York Times bestseller list. The series has sold over 4.2 million copies, has been translated into 35 languages, and has been adapted into a film by Netflix that debuted at #1 in over 80 countries. His collection of retold fairy tales, Beasts and Beauty: Dangerous Tales , was also an instant New York Times bestseller and is in development to be a television series from Sony 3000.

Soman is a graduate of Harvard University and received his MFA in film from Columbia University. Every year, he visits schools around the world to speak to kids and share his secret: that reading is the path to a better life.

Iacopo Bruno is a graphic designer and illustrator. He is also the illustrator of the acclaimed books Mesmerized: How Ben Franklin Solved a Mystery that Baffled All of France and Anything But Ordinary Addie , both by Mara Rockliff. He lives and works in Milan, Italy, with his wife, Francesca. Learn more about Iacopo at theworldofdot.com and iacopobruno.blogspot.it.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ HarperCollins; Collectors edition (September 12, 2023)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 512 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0063342340
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0063342347
  • Reading age ‏ : ‎ 9+ years, from customers
  • Grade level ‏ : ‎ 3 - 6
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.24 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.75 x 1.5 x 8.5 inches
  • #1,513 in Children's Folk Tales & Myths (Books)
  • #2,495 in Children's Friendship Books
  • #2,661 in Children's Fantasy & Magic Books

About the author

Soman chainani.

Soman Chainani’s debut series, THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD & EVIL, has sold more than 3.5 million copies, been translated into 32 languages across six continents, and has been adapted into a major motion picture from Netflix that debuted at #1 in over 80 countries at release.

His book of retold fairytales, BEASTS & BEAUTY, also debuted on the New York Times Bestseller List, his seventh book in a row to do so, and is slated to be a limited television series from Sony 3000, with Soman writing and executive producing. Together, his books have been on the New York Times Bestseller List for 44 weeks.

A graduate of Harvard University and Columbia University’s MFA Film Program, Soman has been nominated for the Waterstone Prize for Children’s Literature, been named to the Out100, and also received the Sun Valley Writer’s Fellowship.

His latest novel, RISE OF THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD & EVIL, kickstarts a new series under his EverNever World brand, to be continued in its sequel, FALL OF The SCHOOL FOR GOOD & EVIL, coming May 2023.

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The School for Good and Evil: The Complete 6-Book Collection

About this ebook.

All six books in Soman Chainani’s New York Times bestselling fantasy series, The School for Good and Evil, are joined together in this digital collection!

Journey into the dazzling world of the School for Good and Evil, where ordinary boys and girls are trained to be fairy-tale heroes and villains. Sophie and Agatha each think they know where they belong. Sophie, with her glass slippers and pink dresses, thinks she'll earn top marks at the School for Good. Meanwhile, Agatha, with her shapeless black frocks and wicked black cat, seems a natural fit for the School for Evil.

But when the two friends are swept into the Endless Woods, they find their fortunes are reversed…. The aftermath leads to unexpected paths, new alliances, and forces that divide them in an exhilarating quest to find their true Ever After.

This complete digital collection will delight both fans that are new to the series and die-hard fans alike. The collection includes:

  • The School for Good and Evil
  • The School for Good and Evil #2: A World without Princes
  • The School for Good and Evil #3: The Last Ever After
  • The School for Good and Evil #4: Quests for Glory
  • The School for Good and Evil #5: A Crystal of Time
  • The School for Good and Evil #6: One True King

Soman Chainani has created a spectacular world that Rick Riordan, author of the bestselling Percy Jackson and the Olympians series, says "reimagines the world of fairy tales and will make you question who is good and who is evil" and Newbery Honor–winning author Ann M. Martin calls "a fairy tale like no other, complete with romance, magic, humor, and a riddle that will keep you turning pages until the end."

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About the author

Soman Chainani's six novels in the School for Good and Evil series each debuted on the New York Times bestseller list. The series has sold over 4.2 million copies, has been translated into 35 languages, and has been adapted into a film by Netflix that debuted at #1 in over 80 countries. His collection of retold fairy tales, Beasts and Beauty: Dangerous Tales, was also an instant New York Times bestseller and is in development to be a television series from Sony 3000.Soman is a graduate of Harvard University and received his MFA in film from Columbia University. Every year, he visits schools around the world to speak to kids and share his secret: that reading is the path to a better life.

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Genie in a Novel

soman chainani book tour

Book Tour – Soman Chainani @ Wesleyan RJ Julia

Yesterday I went to Wesleyan RJ Julia Bookstore to attend a book signing for an author of one of my favorite series. Soman Chainani is the genius behind The School for Good and Evil series which was technically written for the middle-grade age group, but does have a more YA feel to it.

The event was held to promote the release of his newest book, The Rise of the School of Good and Evil, which is a prequel to the six-book series on how the school came to be. It was confirmed to be the first of two books, with the next coming out next year.

soman chainani book tour

During his talk, Soman discussed how he came up with the idea for this series. He admitted that as a Disney movie fan, he often sympathized with the villians because of plot holes in the Disney fairy tales (and there are a lot of them) and no matter what, Good always wins. Yet, in real life, we know that isn’t always the case, right? He said the basic idea behind his book series is that, since no one is completely Good or Evil, there are usually two sides to the story/characters. You see throughout the series that many of the Evil students are ones that you love, while some of the Good students are little arrogant turds (and some have a redemption arc by the end).

He also discussed a little about the Netflix adaptation of The School for Good and Evil, mentioning that it would be a bit darker than the actual book; or in Soman’s words, “hardcore PG-13.” I love how he phrased that. It doesn’t seem like we’ll have to worry too much about the movie straying far from the book, as Soman said that it pretty much lined up well from his involvement. Unfortunately, the movie isn’t coming out until this fall, which is basically eons away.

soman chainani book tour

Anyway, he was so nice and it was great to meet him. As I got my book signed I had to mention that I had just finished the sixth book when the prequel was announced, which was great because I wasn’t ready to let go of the series. I’m very much looking forward to reading my new book and I’ll be counting down the days until the movie comes out… you know, when there’s an actual release date for it.

soman chainani book tour

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2 thoughts on “book tour – soman chainani @ wesleyan rj julia”.

Okay, I think I need to check out this series! It sounds amazing just from this post!

Like Liked by 1 person

Dude, I love this series! That’s awesome you got to go to this! I also had no idea about the prequel, so now I’ll need to get it! 😆

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The Ever Never Handbook

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Wish you could go to the School for Good and Evil? Now you can! Join the ranks of heroes and villains who have walked these hallowed halls and mastered what it takes to be placed in their own fairy tales with The Ever Never Handbook.

Soman Chainani’s New York Times bestselling series (The School for Good and Evil, A World Without Princes, and The Last Ever After) comes to life in this handbook full of everything students need to learn in order to survive their own fairy tale—from dress codes and school rules to alumni portraits, kingdom maps, and much, much more.

Every year, students flock to the School for Good and Evil, ready to prepare for life in a fairy tale. The highest-ranked students become the heroes and villains of the fairy tales, while the lowest end up enchanted animals or plants (if they’re lucky, that is).

This handbook is a personal guide to help students to the top of their class—from surviving Uglification, to picking your own sidekick or henchman, to earning a part in the yearly school musical, and so much more. And of course, it’s in glorious full color and duotone because in the School for Good and Evil, very little is black-and-white.

The Ever Never HandbookBook Cover

Watch the trailer

soman chainani book tour

Also in this series

The School for Good and Evil: The Collector’s Edition Book Cover

The School for Good and Evil: The Collector’s Edition

Fall of the School for Good & Evil Book Cover

Fall of the School for Good & Evil

Rise of the School for Good & Evil Book Cover

Rise of the School for Good & Evil

The School for Good and Evil Book Cover

The School for Good and Evil

A World Without Princes Book Cover

A World Without Princes

The Last Ever After Book Cover

The Last Ever After

Quests for Glory Book Cover

Quests for Glory

A Crystal of Time Book Cover

A Crystal of Time

Screen Rant

Soman chainani interview: beasts and beauty.

The School for Good and Evil author Soman Chainani talks about the Netflix adaptation of the series and his new fairytale book, Beasts and Beauty.

Soman Chainani continues telling stories of good and evil and happily ever afters in his new book  Beasts and Beaty . The collection takes twelve classic fairytales and gives them a modern twist. Stories such as  Red Riding Hood ,  Sleeping Beauty , and Peter Pan are updated with relevant new themes and morales.

Related: School for Good & Evil Video Reveals First Look At The Coven

The author spoke to Screen Rant about the unlikely inspiration for his new book, how it felt to finish The School of Good and Evil series, and the upcoming Netflix adaptation.

Screen Rant: How did you decide which fairy tales you wanted to update?

Soman Chainani: You know, it's so funny because normally with a book you have some kind of master plan and you go in sort of knowing the overall structure, especially with a collection of stories. In this case, it was funny because my brain would not tell me what the next story would be until I got there. So that was sort of the fun of it. I'd be working on a story and I'm like, "I wonder what's going to be next" and I would get absolutely no preview of it until I finished and finalized the story before. And then the next day I'd wake up and I'd know immediately what I was writing and I would know what was coming. So it was almost like it was pre-formed in me somewhere and it was just a matter of following the cues as I went along.

Were there any stories that that didn't make the cut to the final version?

Soman Chainani: No, it's so strange that it is exactly the order I wrote them in. A hundred percent, there was no extra story. It was just one by one, putting them on. The only one that was out of order was Snow White because I didn't know how to do Snow White . And I had sort of thought, maybe I just won't do it because who wants to read another Snow White ? No one. And then the George Floyd protests happened. And it just came to me in a flash - of course, make her the only Black girl in the kingdom. The original Snow White is about beauty, but it's about the idea of an older woman holding on to her own beauty when you can't; at some point, you have to let it go and the youth takes over. And so I felt there were parallels in terms of the racial trauma our country was going through. Beauty had always been defined in a certain kind of stereotypical way, and I wanted to reverse that and have the only Black girl in the kingdom be forced to find her own mirror without help from everybody else.

Once the stories came to you how did you decide how much you wanted to change? How did you decide what to keep from   the original fairytales and what you wanted to do differently?

Soman Chainani: I needed to be surprised. I wanted to be surprised myself when I was writing them. So often I didn't know the twist until I got into the story. And so what I wanted was a story that was surprising, but also a story that would feel relevant to today's audience. So that if they were reading Snow White or   Sleeping Beauty for now that [it] should have a lesson that actually made sense for us today. So it was very unconscious. I would discover things as I went along and often I didn't know how the story was going to end until I got there. I think that was sort of the fun of it because I'm so used to, with The School For Good and Evil series, having everything sort of... not necessarily plotted out ahead of time, but the structure is so complicated because there's so many plot lines and characters and kingdoms and things. And with this, I wanted the feeling of almost telling it around the campfire of like, "I don't know how this story is going, but I'm going to keep telling it until I find the ending". And that's what it felt like, it felt like I was spinning them in real-time.

How involved were you in the process of creating the art that is in Beasts and Beauty ?

Soman Chainani: All my books so far have had a significant amount of art in them. And in this case, we were lucky to find this incredible artist named Julia Iredale. The main thing was just to give her the freedom to pick the moments she thought worked the best. And then she would come and show us her early sketches and then there would be a little bit of negotiation of, "We think this might be stronger" or "Let's highlight this detail" and so it really is a collaborative process, but it starts from the artist's instincts. You want that collaborative experience of somebody else reading your stories and being like, "I want this moment" or "This moment stood out to me". So that this way you really do get the best of both worlds. You get an artistic interpretation at the same time that you are presenting your written interpretation.

How did it feel to finish  The School of Good and Evil  series?

Soman Chainani: It was crazy because I finished it on March 12th of 2020 and I was supposed to take the rest of the year off and basically do nothing. There was no plan. And then lockdown happened, I think 48 hours later. So it was strange. It was just strange because I was supposed to do a six-week book tour, I was supposed to go all over the world with it. It became a very private moment, which, in a way was rewarding in its own sense that after ten years, to bring it to a close I got to have that moment in a more intimate, personal way. But it was odd. I think it was the same with creators everywhere whether it's movies or TV, or books, or art, or music. We just couldn't go out and bring it to the people. But luckily books are the one medium where people can still have that moment by themselves.

What did it feel like to be on set the first day for the filming of  The School of Good and Evil movie ?

Soman Chainani: That was the weirdest 24 hours I've had in my life because I had to do a quarantine before that. So I'd gone to Belfast and been in quarantine, I don't remember how many days it was, but you're alone and you're trapped in your hotel room and you're going slightly crazy and you have no company and no friends or anything. And then immediately the next day you're out of there and you're on a set with six hundred people in this world that I had in my imagination for ten years coming to life. It was just an absolutely surreal first 24 hours. Just because also, Paul Feig is directing it , who is brilliant and amazing and just the coolest guy and he had made it very clear early on that he didn't want it to be a CGI fest. He didn't want it to be just computer pixels. And so they built everything. It almost felt like you were in the school. When they built a room, it was a 360-degree room. Everything was there; it was exactly as it would have been in the school. And so, it was very, very surreal. I remember one time, I almost had a little glitch where I went up to the costume [department] because they wanted something and I saw a folder that said, "Sophie's necklace", and I thought, "Oh, that's funny. There's a Sophie in my book" - like my brain sort of just glitched. I couldn't quite process the whole experience, but I was there long enough, where day, after day, I could sort of settle in and actually be a useful member of the production.

Did you take anything from the set?

Soman Chainani: I took my little producer's chair which is now in my apartment. I'm staring at it right now. And then the other thing I can't say yet. I was going to say it, but I can't say it yet. I did take something else, yes.

I just saw that you recently launched a new website , which teased the unfolding of the multiverse. Can you tell us what that means or give a little tease?

Soman Chainani: I grew up idolizing Disney because what I loved about Disney is they had all these separate worlds, but then they create this larger universe where in the future they could possibly interact. That's what I aspire to; to create independent universes that maybe in the future could have some sort of bridge to each other. So I decided to call it EverNever World because that represents my fascination with good and evil and the idea of ever afters and those who don't believe in such things. And School For Good and Evil was the big first piece of it and now Beasts and Beauties is its own completely independent universe. I'm hoping that as I keep building new things they'll all exist under this big grand umbrella of EverNever World. And time will tell how they all interact.

Next: The 10 Best Teen Book To Screen Adaptations Of The Last 20 Years

Beasts and Beauty releases on September 21 from HarperCollins.

The Bookwyrm's Den

Beasts and Beauty: Dangerous Tales by Soman Chainani || Gloriously Twisted Diverse Fairy Tales

Posted September 25, 2021 by Sammie in blog tour , book review , diversity , fantasy , five stars , LGBT , retelling , short stories , young adult / 3 Comments

Beasts and Beauty: Dangerous Tales by Soman Chainani || Gloriously Twisted Diverse Fairy Tales

Beasts and Beauty: Dangerous Tales

You think you know these stories, don’t you? You are wrong. You don’t know them at all. Twelve tales, twelve dangerous tales of mystery, magic, and rebellious hearts. Each twists like a spindle to reveal truths full of warning and triumph, truths that capture hearts long kept tame and set them free, truths that explore life . . . and death. A prince has a surprising awakening . . .                            A beauty fights like a beast . . . A boy refuses to become prey . . . A path to happiness is lost. . . . then found again. New York Times  bestselling author Soman Chainani respins old stories into fresh fairy tales for a new era and creates a world like no other. These stories know you. They understand you. They reflect you. They are tales for our times. So read on, if you dare. 

One Star

Content Tags:

Perfect for readers who want:.

  • A new take on some old stories.
  • Fairy tales where the damsel in distress doesn’t need to wait for her prince.
  • Men can also be in distress, for that matter. Imagine that!
  • Fairy tales filled with more modern messages and morals.
  • Diverse characters, including non-Eurocentric ethnicities and settings, plus LGBTQ+!
  • A play on tropes that will keep you guessing as to where the story is going.

Many thanks to HarperCollins and Turn the Page Tours for a copy in exchange for an honest, unbiased review.

Heart Divider

I have to admit, that cover is what grabbed me right off the bat. I immediately thought , yes, this is the sort of fairy tale I think I’d like, please . I’ll admit that I’d never read any of Chainani’s work before, even though his School for Good and Evil series is really popular at my library. I’ll tell you what, I definitely need to go back and read them now, after finishing this book!

Beasts and Beauty: Dangerous Tales is an utterly gorgeous book of diverse fairy tales that have been flipped on their head. You’ll never know what to expect from these classic tales with unpredictable twists, paired with some gorgeous illustrations!

Chainani has such a gorgeous writing style, and it immediately sucked me in. I found myself re-reading passages because I particularly liked a turn of phrase he used or the way he worded things. Beasts & Beauty was such an enjoyable read in that way! That’s not even to mention how much I absolutely loved the fact that these are more diverse, more empowering fairy tale retellings than their originals (and rest assured, I did absolutely love this fact). Women can be fierce, men can be gentle, and not everything is as it first appears. Plus, not all fairy tales have entirely happy endings. Chainani brings a fresh perspective to the whole “bittersweet” ending in a way that I very much appreciate, because I don’t always need (or even want) a happily ever after.

Collections of short stories are always kind of hard to review, because outside of the general things I’ve said above, every story is different, and I’m always bound to like some more than others.

That’s kind of just the nature of the beast when it comes to a collection of . . . well, anything, really. Besides, I really don’t have anything to say in way of a review other than read this dang book . Trust me, it’s everything you’ve been waiting for if you were a child like me, spoon-fed fairy tales and other sorts of fantasy that you wanted so desperately to love but could never quite see yourself reflected in.

So in lieu of a standard review, I’m going to take a bit of time to introduce you to some of my favorite of Chainani’s retellings.

This is nothing against the ones I don’t choose, of course. There wasn’t a story in here that I didn’t like or wouldn’t gladly read again. Some just clung to me more and have decided to hang around in my brainspace, which is a dangerous feat and one worthy of some praise.

First Lines:

Why I love it: First, Snow White is black, which is amazing (and Chainani twists it in a way that still makes perfect sense within the context of the original). More than that, she isn’t just hated for her beauty, but because the kingdom she lives in believes that people who look like her shouldn’t have beauty to begin with. I appreciate the way this brings a whole new dynamic to the story. In this, though, Snow White isn’t just some poor victim doomed to her fate.

Favorite Quote:

Why I love it: First of all, a Spanish Cinderella is pretty cool to start off with. My favorite thing is that Cinderella isn’t even the protagonist in this story. How’s that for a twist?! The underlying original story is still there. What I love most about this story is that while all the women are looking for this prince to satisfy their need for love, they’ve completely overlooked the fact that they’ve already found love, and that romance isn’t the only way to love another human.

Rumpelstiltskin

Why I love it: I absolutely love (and totally didn’t expect) the perspective of the Devil! I enjoyed the unique perspective for this story, though, and it suited it just perfectly! Mathilde is very much a product of the fairy tales she’s told: that if she can just catch the eye of a wealthy suitor, she’ll earn her happily ever after. All she has to do is be pretty and fair and a worthy man will always come save her from the injustices of the world. Until … they don’t. Then she’s left needing to save herself, which is a rather daunting task. This story was perhaps a bit more on-the-nose with its message than some of the others, but it’s one where the message is just so stark and the structure of the story itself so unique that I couldn’t help but love it!

Red Riding Hood

Why I love it: The town is perfectly content sacrificing beautiful women to keep everyone safe. No one asks or wants to know (or even cares, for that matter) what the wolves do with them. It’s simply deemed a necessary loss. Sacrifice the beautiful women so that everyone else can live. But not everyone is okay with being sacrificed. I’ve read some Red Riding Hood retellings where the protagonist is clever, but this is one of my favorites because of the emotional punch it packs. This isn’t just an isolated incident, and the protagonist’s life isn’t the only one at stake. The issue is a larger societal one, and those can be harder to solve.

The Little Mermaid

Why I love it: I love stories written from the villain’s perspective! This one doesn’t really have much of a point of view, being basically a conversation. The sea witch, however, despite being a villain, isn’t necessarily wrong? The story isn’t claiming that she’s good or virtuous, which I appreciate, but it’s also not outright saying she’s evil, either. She’s a product of her circumstances as much as anyone else. Also, this is definitely my favorite story out of this collection because the sea witch says what every adult forced to watch The Little Mermaid over and over again is thinking by at least the third go-round of the film. It’s very much akin to Elsa’s classic, “You can’t marry someone you just met,” line and it’s such a gratifying feeling.

About Soman Chainani

soman chainani book tour

Soman Chainani's first novel, THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD AND EVIL, debuted on the New York Times Bestseller List, has been translated into 26 languages across six continents, and will soon be a major motion picture from Universal Studios.

The sequels, A WORLD WITHOUT PRINCES and THE LAST EVER AFTER, debuted on the New York Times Bestseller List as well. Together, the books of the series have been on the print and extended NYT lists for a total of 33 weeks.

As a writer and film director, Soman's films have played at over 150 film festivals around the world, winning more than 30 jury and audience prizes, and his writing awards include honors from Big Bear Lake, New Draft, the CAPE Foundation, the Sun Valley Writer’s Fellowship, and the coveted Shasha Grant, awarded by a jury of international film executives.

When he’s not telling stories or teaching in New York City, Soman is a die-hard tennis player who never lost a first-round match for ten years . . . until he started writing THESCHOOL FOR GOOD AND EVIL. Now he loses all the time.

Website | Twitter | Goodreads | Instagram

About Julia Iredale

Julia Iredale is an artist who works as a freelance illustrator for clients around the world. Her work is informed by her love of mythology, dark fantasy, and human psychology, weaving these together to create beautiful, mysterious characters and worlds. She lives in Victoria, British Columbia.

soman chainani book tour

Enter for your chance to win one (1) finished copy of BEASTS AND BEAUTY:DANGEROUS TALES by Soman Chainani! Open USA only

Tuesday, September 21, 2021 – Tuesday, September 28, 2021

soman chainani book tour

You can find the full tour schedule here .

September 21

Turn the Page Tours – Welcome Post/Author Interview Celia’s Reads  – Book Review

September 22

Brinns Books  – Book Review, Favorite Quotes Nonbinary Knight Reads  – Book Review, Favorite Quotes A Bookish Dream  – Book Review

September 23

Second Hand Reader  – Book Review, Favorite Things About  Beasts and Beauty The Momma Spot  – Book Review Kait Plus Books  – Author Interview

September 24

Polish and Paperbacks  – Book Review What She Will Read  – Book Review, Favorite Quotes Devouring Books  – Author Interview

September 25

The Reader’s Game  – Book Review Eclecticbookwrm  – Book Review, Favorite Things About  Beasts and Beauty The Bookwrym’s Den  – Book Review, Favorite Quotes

September 26

Stephanie’s Reads  – Book Review Caitlyn’s Book Corner  – Book Review, Favorite Quotes Jena Brown Writes  – Book Review

September 27

Books, Tea, Healthy Me  – Book Review, Favorite Quotes Avni Reads   –  Book Review Reading Stewardess  – Book Review, Favorite Things About  Beasts and Beauty Leann Reads Books  – Book Review

Stay Fierce, Sammie

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Teen Librarian

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Entering the School for Good & Evil: An Interview with Soman Chainani

My pleasure! I’m Soman Chainani, the author of THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD & EVIL series and the writer of the upcoming film adaptations for Universal as well. I’m thrilled to be here at Teen Librarian to give you a little peek behind the scenes of the SGE world. I’m also a massive, massive Anglophile and worked in the British film and TV industry for years before I started work on the series. I’d live in London in a heartbeat if I didn’t have to fly to Los Angeles so often for film work.

2. School for Good & Evil is your first novel, everyone I have spoken to that has read it has been raving about it (in a good way) myself included – how does it feel to have such a rapturous response?

Any temporary ego boost is tempered by how hard I’m working on the second book in the series, called A WORLD WITHOUT PRINCES . Sequels tend to be disappointing, but I’ve always told myself that each book in the SGE series has to be better than the last – and wildly different — or there’s no point writing them. So I’ve been holed up in various rooms and coffee shops, writing like a madman. Even when I was in London for the UK tour, I’d spend half the day at a tea shop in Soho banging my head against the wall on a new chapter.

That said, I’m fully aware of how special and lucky this whole run has been so far. I had a list of goals I wanted to achieve by the end of the series – and they all happened in the first week! I stumbled around for a while, feeling like I was in a dream. Good news can sometimes be as disorienting as bad news. But now I’m happily back to work, abusing myself daily as to why I can’t write faster. 3. I have heard that the movie rights for SfG&E have been purchased – will you be involved in the adaptation?

I’m writing the adaptation for Universal with Malia Scotch Marmo (the writer of Hook). The movie will be very different from the book. For one thing, there’s just too much story in the book to fit into a two-hour movie. For another, a literal adaptation of a book can be quite dreary and repetitive. I’m much more interested in finding a new way to tell the story of Sophie and Agatha, so that the film feels like a new experience, even to lovers of the book.

4. On the surface, the story looks like your typical fairy tale of good and evil but once you get past the cover it challenges ones preconceptions of good and evil – what influences did you have in the writing of the story?

We didn’t have cable when I was young, so all we had was our rickety TV set and VHS tapes of every single Disney animated movie. Until age 8 or so, that was all I pretty much watched. Everything I learned about storytelling, I learned from Disney. When I went to college, though, I became fascinated by the gap between the original tales and these Disney revisions.

As a relentless student of the Grimms’ stories, what I loved about them was how unsafe the characters were. You could very well end up with wedding bells and an Ever After – or you could lose your tongue or be baked into a pie. There was no ‘warmth’ built into the narrator, no expectations of a happy ending. The thrill came from vicariously trying to survive the gingerbread house, the hook-handed captain, or the apple-carrying crone at the door – and relief upon survival. Somewhere in that gap between the Disney stories and the retellings, THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD AND EVIL was born.

In recent years, fairy tale mash-ups, retellings, and revisions have become popular – and for good reason, given how enduring and inspiring the source material is. That said, I had my sights set on something more primal: a new fairy tale, just as unleashed and unhinged as the old, that found the anxieties of today’s children. To acknowledge the past – the alumni of the genre, so to speak – and move on to a new class. As soon as I started thinking in those terms, I knew I wanted to do a school-based novel. I was walking in Regents Park in London before a meeting when I had the first image… a girl in pink and a girl in black falling into the wrong schools… I got so caught up thinking that I missed my appointment entirely.

5. There are some superficial comparisons to Hogwarts Harry Potter, but the School for Good and Evil is a much darker place – has your book faced any challenges yet or is it still too new to have popped up on outraged parents radars yet?

It is a much darker place – Hogwarts you choose to go to. You’re kidnapped to The School for Good and Evil and there’s no return. But encouragingly, I haven’t heard a single complaint about the book’s content. There’s certainly been commentary about its amoral universe and the intensity of what the kids have to face – but the course of the story seems to solve any concerns.

That said, there will be rumbles about Book 2. You’ll see.

6. Have the majority of your fans identified themselves as Evers or Nevers? and how would you describe yourself? Hmm, good question. It’s been so evenly split! It’s quite amazing, really. Even when I go to schools, by the end, it’s a very clear 50-50.

I can be comically high maintenance (my friends joke Sophie is the real me), so I’d surely be an overachieving Ever and the most regular user of the Groom Room (the medieval spa, which only the top ranked students are allowed to use). That said, Evil’s classes have no boundaries – for sheer entertainment value alone, I can see the allure. That’s if I had a choice. In the process of writing the book, I realized I wasn’t quite sure which school I would actually end up in– so I created an online assessment to answer that question. At www.schoolforgoodandevil.com , every reader can take a 10-question SGE Entrance Exam to determine whether they’re an Ever or a Never. I wrote all the questions myself and there’s a bank of over 100, so the questions change every time. I’ve taken it a number of times, trying to be as honest as I can, and I always end up 75% Evil and 25% Good. Those who read the novel will agree that this isn’t a surprising result in the least.

7. Fairy tales were originally dark and bloody tales before they were tamed by the Grimm brothers and Charles Perrault (and later Walt Disney) and had most of the blood and death removed, your story returns to the roots of the tales were bad things happen to the deserving (those deserving of having bad things happen to them) – was this intentional returning to the roots of the stories and removing most of the sugar?

Absolutely. As I mentioned earlier, I just don’t quite understand why children of two hundred years ago could handle these frank and brutal stories of survival and cleverness – while children today must endure the sanitized versions. Frankly, I find the latter far more offensive and damaging. So in the School for Good and Evil, I point out this disparity. Once upon a time, Good and Evil were in pure balance. But now Good wins all the time, is obsessed with beauty, clothes, and superficial romance. The School itself has become Disneyfied and is trying to find its way back.

8. Finally do you have any plans for a sequel either involving Sophie and Agatha or staying with students at the School?

It’s a three-book series, so you’ll see what’s next. As for who’s in it… well that’s the question isn’t it! Thanks for having me on your wonderful blog. SGE fans can join the jam-packed Facebook page, message me on Twitter at @somanchainani , and keep up with all things Good and Evil on www.schoolforgoodandevil.com .

COMPETITION TIME:

Win One of Five Copies of The School For Good & Evil!

Follow this link: http://schoolforgoodandevil.com/exam/ Take the exam and then comment on this post with your name and if you were determined to be Good or Evil. Winners will be chosen at random at the end of the month!

Share this:

By Matt Imrie on August 5, 2013 · Posted in Competition , Interviews

3 Comments | Post Comment

Caroline says:

I’m good, of course! But only 70odd% coz I wanted to eat the pancakes 🙂

Posted on August 11th, 2013

Stephanie says:

Good. Well, 70% good and 30% evil.

56.7% Good, 43.3% Evil. Pretty balanced.

Posted on August 16th, 2013

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Soman Chainani

  • Books By Soman Chainani

The School for Good and Evil

A World without Princes

The Last Ever After

Quests for Glory

A Crystal of Time

  • The School for Good and Evil: The Camelot Years
  • James R. Tuck
  • Cynthia Bailey-Pratt
  • Francis Robinson
  • Gesine Bullock-Prado
  • Jan-Andrew Henderson
  • Tom Jokinen
  • Pierre Dubois
  • Ann K. Schwader
  • ElizaBeth Gilligan
  • Emily Heckman
  • Patricia Helding
  • Gord Sellar
  • Victoria Morgan
  • Konrad Bercovici
  • Adam Scott Glancy
  • Ian Hancock

Books by Soman Chainani

The School for Good and Evil 006210490X Book Cover

$ 3.59 - $ 17.77

A World without Princes 0062104934 Book Cover

$ 3.89 - $ 16.46

The Last Ever After 0062104969 Book Cover

$ 4.29 - $ 15.59

Quests for Glory 0062658484 Book Cover

$ 4.49 - $ 28.19

A Crystal of Time 0062885758 Book Cover

$ 6.79 - $ 30.69

Stories for All of Us 110193462X Book Cover

Stories for All of Us

$ 4.19 - $ 15.55

One True King 0062695223 Book Cover

One True King

$ 11.61 - $ 15.75

Because You Love to Hate Me: 13 Tales of Villainy 1681193647 Book Cover

Because You Love to Hate Me: 13 Tales of Villainy

$ 5.09 - $ 7.49

Rise of the School for Good and Evil 000850802X Book Cover

Rise of the School for Good and Evil

$ 4.89 - $ 16.46

Beasts and Beauty 006265263X Book Cover

Beasts and Beauty

$ 4.89 - $ 15.75

The School For Good and Evil: The Ever Never Handbook 0062423061 Book Cover

The School For Good and Evil: The Ever Never Handbook

$ 5.39 - $ 15.16

The School for Good and Evil: The Complete Series: The School for Good and Evil, the School for Good and Evil: A World Without Princes, the School for Good and Evil: The Last Ever After, the School fo 0063222809 Book Cover

The School for Good and Evil: The Complete Series: The School for Good and Evil, the School for Good and Evil: A World Without Princes, the School for Good and Evil: The Last Ever After, the School fo

Fall of the School for Good and Evil 0063269554 Book Cover

Fall of the School for Good and Evil

Releases 5/7/2024

The School for Good and Evil 0062855573 Book Cover

School for Good and Evil Series Box Set : Books 1-3

The School for Good and Evil Collection 0062424378 Book Cover

The School for Good and Evil Collection

Out of Stock

The School for Good and Evil: Ruled Journal 0063282410 Book Cover

The School for Good and Evil: Ruled Journal

The School for Good and Evil 6-book box set. Books 1-6. Includes Bonus: The Ever Never Handbook. 0063086360 Book Cover

The School for Good and Evil 6-book box set. Books 1-6. Includes Bonus: The Ever Never Handbook.

The School for Good and Evil: 10th Anniversary Edition 0063342340 Book Cover

The School for Good and Evil: 10th Anniversary Edition

La escuela del Bien y del Mal 6287565004 Book Cover

La escuela del Bien y del Mal

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soman chainani book tour

The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

Tim Ferriss's 4-Hour Workweek and Lifestyle Design Blog. Tim is an author of 5 #1 NYT/WSJ bestsellers, investor (FB, Uber, Twitter, 50+ more), and host of The Tim Ferriss Show podcast (400M+ downloads)

The Tim Ferriss Show Transcripts: Soman Chainani (#220)

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Please enjoy this transcript of my interview with Soman Chainani , a detailed planner, filmmaker, and New York Times best selling author. Transcripts may contain a few typos—with some episodes lasting 2+ hours, it’s difficult to catch some minor errors. Enjoy!

Listen to the interview here or by selecting any of the options below.

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DUE TO SOME HEADACHES IN THE PAST, PLEASE NOTE LEGAL CONDITIONS: Tim Ferriss owns the copyright in and to all content in and transcripts of The Tim Ferriss Show podcast, with all rights reserved, as well as his right of publicity. WHAT YOU’RE WELCOME TO DO: You are welcome to share the below transcript (up to 500 words but not more) in media articles (e.g., The New York Times, LA Times, The Guardian), on your personal website, in a non-commercial article or blog post (e.g., Medium), and/or on a personal social media account for non-commercial purposes, provided that you include attribution to “The Tim Ferriss Show” and link back to the tim.blog/podcast URL. For the sake of clarity, media outlets with advertising models are permitted to use excerpts from the transcript per the above. WHAT IS NOT ALLOWED: No one is authorized to copy any portion of the podcast content or use Tim Ferriss’ name, image or likeness for any commercial purpose or use, including without limitation inclusion in any books, e-books, book summaries or synopses, or on a commercial website or social media site (e.g., Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, etc.) that offers or promotes your or another’s products or services. For the sake of clarity, media outlets are permitted to use photos of Tim Ferriss from the media room on tim.blog or (obviously) license photos of Tim Ferriss from Getty Images, etc.

Tim Ferriss: Hello ladies and germs, this is Tim Ferriss and welcome to another episode of the Tim Ferriss Show, where it is my job to deconstruct world class performers of all types, whether they are military strategists, super athletes, business icons, or anything in between, really, to tease out the habits, routines, favorite books, tips and tricks you can test and apply in your own life.

And this episode was a real treat. If you enjoyed my episodes with Seth Godin, Noah Kagan, any episode that really gets into the nitty gritty details, then you are going to love this one. It is a conversation with Soman Chainani, and I’ll spell that for you: S-O-M-A-N, C-H-A-I-N-A-N-I, trying the English today. You can find him on Twitter, on social @somanchianani. He was introduced to me by Brian Koppelman, very, very accomplished artist, screenwriter, producer, co-creator of the hit show Billions , and a very, very long filmography. When I asked Brian what I should dig into with Soman, he said many things.

But among others, his “discipline and rigor, carefulness of his approach in all aspects of life.” He’s in incredible physical condition. He’s super careful about financial security. He kept tutoring after getting a three-book deal. He’s a detailed planner and an artist of high order; more disciplined and organized and business-like than almost any artist I’ve met.

So who is Soman? Well, his debut fiction series, The School for Good and Evil has sold well over a million copies, has been translated into 25 languages across six continents, been a New York Times best seller for more than 30 weeks, and will soon be a film from Universal Pictures with Soman co-writing the screenplay.

He’s a graduate of Harvard University and Columbia University’s MFA Film Program, after which he began his career as a screenwriter for film and TV. He was recently named to the Out 100 and has received the $100,000 Circle Grant and the Sun Valley Writer’s Fellowship, both for debut writers. He’s also an incredible tennis player, which we will dig into. There are a lot of parallels and a lot of transfers.

We talk about his obsession with Disney and we cover so much ground. I think you guys will really enjoy this episode. So pay attention, get a notebook ready, and please enjoy my conversation with Soman Chainani.

Sonan, welcome to the show.

Soman Chainani: Thanks so much for having me.

Tim Ferriss: I am sitting here with a set of questions and exploratory bullets, and each one of these could be explored, I would say, for an hour or two I would guess. So we may need around two at some point, but I’m getting ahead of myself. Let’s start at the mutual connection that we have. How do you know the incredible Brian Koppelman? And for you people who don’t know that name, he is a polymath, he is a writer. He co-wrote Rounders , The Illusionist ; I think The Illusionist he co-produced, and is co-creator of Billions , this new hit show that I’m absolutely in love with. But how do you know Brian?

Soman Chainani: It started I think because in my 20s, I’d come out of film school at Columbia and I’d gone straight to London, and I had been working on a movie over there for a couple of years. That was supposed to be my sort of hot-shot debut, and all that stuff. It ultimately fell apart, so I came back to New York when I was 25 or 26, broke, a quarter of a million dollars in debt from college and film school, and I didn’t know how to make money. So I didn’t know what to do. Luckily, a friend saved me and introduced me to a couple clients and told me to become an SAT tutor. So I sort of learned overnight how to tutor, and got into that whole business.

It just happened that Brian’s son needed a tutor. So that’s how it started. I was working with his son and a bunch of his son’s friend s as I was starting to write the first School for Good and Evil book.

So he sort of watched the entire evolution from hot-shot film maker, to broke and penniless tutor, to then rising from the ashes into a new career. He knows me better than anyone, my God.

Tim Ferriss: He is one of your biggest fans. He’s an enthusiastic guy to begin with but if we were to spinal tap that and take it to a level; the enthusiasm with which he wanted to make the introduction was, of course, an immediate yes then on my part. One thing he mentioned to me, and I wanted to dig into this, is first let’s back up. This is going to be a very non chronological interview; we’re going to jump all over the place because that’s what conversations tend to do.

The School for Good and Evil, how many books are there in that series right now?

Soman Chainani: There are three books in the series right now, and then there’s a full-color, kind of graphic handbook that’s a companion guide that we offer to reluctant readers; to kids who hate to read and will never read novels, ever. But if they want to be part of the universe, they get this sort of graphic version of the world. So there’s either the three novels, or there’s the handbook. And then I’m in the process of writing the fourth one as we speak, and I think there will probably be, in the end, six in the series. Just also because the movies are going to start to come out from Universal, so I wanted to have enough books to stretch out to match the movies.

Tim Ferriss: You didn’t want to end up in a Game of Thrones situation?

Soman Chainani: At least once a week I think of that situation and cannot imagine that. Just because I get so involved in my work, and I take it almost too seriously at times. The idea that you have to share your secrets of what’s going to happen with somebody who then is going to put it on TV before you – oh, my God, I’d kill myself. I couldn’t do it.

Tim Ferriss: So you are, according to Brian and this is our first conversation, you and I, one of the most disciplined and rigorous people he knows in all things. One of the adjectives he used was “careful,” and I wanted to explore that because I thought it might lead us to some back story. So he said – and correct me if I’m wrong – that you kept tutoring, you kept doing your tutoring after you got a three-book deal. Is that true?

Soman Chainani: I kept tutoring after we made the movie deal, and the movie deal was enough for me to not have to work for 15 years.

Tim Ferriss: So why keep tutoring?

Soman Chainani: I just couldn’t get out of my head the idea that art is something that you should not depend on. I don’t like depending on my art for income because then I start to think in a mercenary way.

I had to get it through my head that it’s okay; you’re making enough now from the books and the movies that you don’t have to confuse them. You don’t have to confuse money and art. Because the great thing about tutoring was it took all the pressure off the book. Even though I was broke at the time, even though I had nothing going for me, it meant that I could write freely because at the end of the day, my money wasn’t going to come from that book.

So I couldn’t let go of tutoring. I tutored up until last year. I went three or four years longer than I should have because it just meant that I had that absolute freedom in the back of my head that if it all went to pot, I still had tutoring.

Tim Ferriss: Should have is a tricky contraction because I like the separation of church and state that you described in so much as you were not feeling as though you have to find rent money through your art, even if your art is compensating you well; psychologically allowing you to compartmentalize that you don’t think about what will sell best as the primary directive of your art, perhaps. Where did you grow up?

Soman Chainani: I grew up in a little island off Miami called Key Biscayne, that is now quite popular as a resort town. It has a Ritz Carlton, it has a Starbucks now; it had neither of those things when I was growing up. It was basically just beaches and trees when I grew up, and it was very, very small. But the one thing it was famous for was tennis. If you didn’t play tennis on Key Biscayne, you weren’t part of the cool crowd. It’s still where a lot of players train these days. That’s where I grew up.

Tim Ferriss: How would you describe your – I don’t know what age to pick, here – say, 10-year-old self? Were you a popular kid?

Soman Chainani: Let me think. No, not until high school. And I think it was because I just was a little confused, I think, at that age. I was the only Indian kid on the island I grew up on. I was one of three people of color at my high school. So you grow up not looking like anyone else. Then once I turned 12 and 13 and I start liking guys instead of girls, that adds another dimension to the whole thing.

Also at the same time, I’m basically 6 foot and at that time I was like 110 pounds. I could not put weight on to save my life. So all those things, it just felt like I just didn’t fit in in any way, shape or form. I didn’t know what to do. I think it led me to basically retreat into work.

So I became the kid who won everything. They used to give out subject awards at school every year. They gave out 11 on the last day of school. From seventh grade through 11th grade, I won all 11 every single year. So it was basically me just walking back and forth picking up trophies, because that’s sort of what I did. I just threw myself into work. It was only once I got to the later years of high school, 11th and 12th grade, that I started to let my real self come out a little bit. I just think it broke through on its own, and I think people started to realize I actually did have a sense of humor, for all my workaholic tendencies.

Tim Ferriss: When did you become openly gay?

Soman Chainani: I think it was my senior year of college. It’s so funny because now I watch kids come out, and it’s done with such empowerment and this kind of beautiful freedom.

And if there’s one thing I’m sort of envious in the entire world, it’s the way that kids come out now. Because when we did it in the early to mid 2000s, there just wasn’t anything out there to help you. So it was just traumatic, having to come out to people, to your parents, to your friends. Every time you did it, it was just trauma.

So I think once I actually came out is when everything sort of broke open and that’s when I think the path I was on… Up until then, I thought I was going to be in business. I thought I was going to be a consultant or a banker or any of these things. And it was only after I came out that I think my creative self came back. It was almost like that had gone in the closet, too and it took time for both to come out.

Tim Ferriss: I was talking to a dear friend of mine, Adam Robinson who has been on the podcast as a guest before but alongside several other people. We just did a solo episode. He battled with depression for a long time, and I’ve had my own bouts with depression. I’m not saying these are the same thing but we had a long discussion about one of the ingredients being inauthenticity, meaning not following who you are or opening up to who you are fully as one of the ingredients in that particular breed of depression.

I’ve thought a lot about that. Were you able to be yourself with your parents at a young age? Or did they know you were gay? Was that an open secret? Could you describe your dynamic with your family?

Soman Chainani: You know, my parents are amazing. They’re just both brilliant people, and both at the end of the day so open minded.

I don’t know if it was so much about worrying about disappointing them as much as at that time in the world there were no models of how to do it in a real way, especially in the world of Indian families. There was nothing. So I don’t know if it was them specifically that scared me as much as the idea. I didn’t even know what it would look like. I thought if you come out of the closet, you’re going to live this very small, lonely life; that’s what I thought at the time.

What’s funny is once I came out, once I became a writer, all these things, I look back at that time and think thank God my life unfolded the way it did. Because if you look at the School for Good and Evil books, there are 120 characters. Each has their own story. It’s an entire labyrinth world that I don’t keep track of with notes. I know it in my head. Everything’s in my head.

And I think all of that energy, this entire universe of creativity was trapped. So no wonder I was a complete basket case for so much of my young life. Because forget the gay thing; if you’re not actually letting out this absolute volcano of creative energy inside of you, it’s going to be rough. And so I think that’s one of the missions I have in life, just myself is whenever I sense another creative soul who’s bottled themselves up, I gravitate towards them and try to find a way to let them out.

That’s what the books are, too; the message of the books in there for kids is find your tribe. Don’t buy into the matrix of what society is telling you a successful person or a hero has to be. Find your tribe.

Tim Ferriss: What did you major in undergrad?

Soman Chainani: English, just because when you go to a school like Harvard, there’s nothing practical. A lot of the finance guys will major in economics or government but only out of just default because there isn’t anything applicable at a school like Harvard, really. In my head, I knew I was going to go into consulting or banking but it didn’t matter what you majored in so I figured I might as well major in something that I actually like, which was English.

Tim Ferriss: I remember having an open Q&A not too long ago. The question was related to entrepreneurship, and I gave a response. Then they interrupted and they said it’s easy for you to say because you’re a male who went to an Ivy League school. But I remember thinking to myself, the last thing an Ivy League school does is prepare you to be an entrepreneur.

Soman Chainani: Oh, you’re so right.

Tim Ferriss: It molds you to be a very well polished cog in a fancy machine like consulting or banking but it does not, in any way, probably if anything inhibits in many respects entrepreneurship. But that could be a whole separate podcast, I suppose.

Soman Chainani: We have to at some point do our dump on Ivies because I have so much to say. I almost want to put on my forehead that if you went to an Ivy, I probably won’t date you, which is like the ultimate form of self loathing.

Tim Ferriss: Where did film or the fiction come into the picture?

Soman Chainani: I think growing up, film was my love. I always wanted to be in film in some capacity; I thought that was what I was going to end up doing. The big problem, I thought, was that I was not one of these people craving to direct just for directing’s sake.

I didn’t have this burning desire to be a Spielberg or something like that. I wanted to control a vision of a world. So I already had a fantasy streak inside of me. I gravitated towards Narnia , Lord of the Rings ; all the Grimm’ fairy tales, things like that. So I think ultimately, what I wanted to be able to do only sort of came into existence once J.K. Rowling wrote Potter.

Because once I saw Potter, I thought oh, wait, this is exactly the kind of brain I have, which is create your own universe; control how this universe is going to be presented in media, whether it’s books, it’s film or whatever. I think that’s where School for Good and Evil came from at some level was this desire to somehow bring a universe in my head into the world in the most fully, realized way possible, combining my interests in both film and literature.

Tim Ferriss: I have something I can’t get out of my head so I’m going to jump back to tennis. The first thing I was thinking was at 6 foot whatever you were, 110 pounds, you must have had a really mean serve. That was the first thing I was thinking. And the second is really a self-interested question because I have been considering learning tennis this year.

You’ve spent an incredible amount of time tutoring, granted it doesn’t sound like you were tutoring in tennis but how would you recommend I learn to play tennis, if I were going to take it seriously? And what should I focus on and what should I spend less time on, maybe things that novices waste a lot of time on? Do you have any thoughts on that?

Soman Chainani: That’s such a good question. It’s funny. I’ll tell you how I play to this day, and it might help. Which is that all year long in New York, I play four or five times a week with different people.

It’s usually we play matches, or we hit, or whatever. And then every two months, I go down to Miami to the condo complex I’ve lived in since I was a kid, and I play with the coach I’ve had since I was a kid. I’ve been playing with him for 25 years.

Tim Ferriss: And for context for people listening, you did not lose a first round match for ten years, correct?

Soman Chainani: What happened was I went ten years playing tournaments all the time from high school up until probably my late 20s and never lost the first match. Because I always felt like I had paid the entry fee, I had done so much work to get there because often the tournament was in another state or another country; I would not lose. It didn’t matter who you put me against; I had this sort of killer, iron will that would get me through that match. And as soon as I started writing Good and Evil, as soon as I was putting all my creative energy elsewhere, I think I lost six in a row.

Tim Ferriss: You have to pick and choose where you put your energy, right? I interrupted you telling me how you play, though.

Soman Chainani: I go down to Miami and I play with the same coach I’ve been playing with for 25 years. He’s 70 years old; he cannot move. So what he does is he takes a basket of balls and feeds them to me quite slowly and analyzes my swing on every single one. So it’s 100 percent about technique, 100 percent about timing. It’s as basic as it gets.

But it’s like three or four times a year; he’s just training technique. If I had a kid or had to teach somebody tennis, it’s get your technique perfect. Because the thing about tennis is it’s so unconscious. If you try to consciously think your way through the strokes or anything like that, you’re going to end up in trouble just because of how fast it ultimately goes. It’s like ping pong. So it has to become automatic; it has to become conscious. Your technique has to be impeccable.

One of the things he taught me from an early age is don’t rush to the baseline. Start at the service line and get your technique right, and then things will flow. So I became sort of technique obsessive, which of course flows into all the other aspects of my life because I’m big on technique and process.

Tim Ferriss: Service line is where you serve from?

Soman Chainani: No, service line is the line in the middle of the court.

Tim Ferriss: Got it, here we go. Alright; now we’re at my level. Thanks.

Soman Chainani: The funny thing about tennis is it reminds me of gymnastics and figure skating where it rewards attention to detail. It rewards individualistic obsession. You’re talking sweet spot of my personality. It’s just the one sport I love, and I also think it’s a great sport where you can put me up against somebody who is enormously big and powerful, and it won’t help them.

It’s a sport where power is not going to do all that much for you ultimately against somebody who’s fast. And we can see that in the men’s game now with Djokovic and Murray and all those guys.

Tim Ferriss: I have next to me, literally five inches from my left thigh, I have the book I’m finishing which is Stories of Your Life and Others by Ted Chang; it’s a science fiction compilation of short stories. And then right next to that is the next book I was planning on reading, The Inner Game of Tennis by W. Timothy Gallway. I don’t know if that’s how you pronounce his last name. Where do novices waste a lot of time? We’re going to get into what makes a good coach, and this is I think going to take us a few different places. But where should I not spend a lot of time in the beginning? And that relates to how should I choose a tennis coach.

Soman Chainani: I think one of the things is when coaches put you against other kids very early and you’re playing matches very early because they want to develop your competitive instincts, again ] I think it’s super dunderheaded.

Because what they don’t realize is that your competitive instincts are far stronger than your technique. So what you’ll end up doing is coming up with this hatchet job way of playing tennis that somehow will do the job to win you some matches, but it isn’t going to serve you well in the long run.

Tim Ferriss: It’s like memorizing openings in chess versus learning first principles.

Soman Chainani: Yes. That’s how you get to the club. When you go to the club and you see all these people with hacking backhands, or they slice both the forehand and the back; they play in a way that doesn’t make any sense. It’s because as a kid, they were put against too many of their compatriots in competitive matches and were never taught actually how to play. So I think it’s more about finding a teacher that is obsessive with technique. The coach I played with invented the two-handed backhand on tour. He was the first person to ever use it. it’s a guy named Mike Belkin. He played Connors at Wimbledon.

All he cares about is are you hitting the ball in the micro meter sweet spot. I can hit the perfect shot; he doesn’t care. He’s just looking at where I hit it. Ultimately, I think tennis is about knowing your weaknesses. And I think my weaknesses, for instance, are weaknesses that show up in other aspects of my life. So having someone call me out a few times a year actually helps me not just on the tennis court but everywhere else.

Tim Ferriss: What are some of your weaknesses that manifest elsewhere?

Soman Chainani: Oh, boy. I would say –

Tim Ferriss: We could just trade weaknesses for two hours, but don’t worry. I won’t do this the entire interview.

Soman Chainani: He doesn’t understand why my margins are so small. He thinks the comfortable way to play tennis is to give yourself two inches of net clearance.

Tim Ferriss: I see; margins you mean the space over the net with which you clear it; got it.

Soman Chainani: Space over the net, yeah. And mine is like two millimeters because I hit the ball very hard and very flat for the lines.

And he doesn’t understand why everything has to be so dangerous, which is the same note I get when I submit my books to my editor; why does everything have to be so provocative? Why does everything have to be so aggressively on the edge of what’s appropriate? So it shows up all the time.

The other two things are when I get tense, I tend not to finish my swing which I think shows up in life also, which is when you’re nervous, or tense, and you go in feeling on your heels. You don’t let the full expression of yourself through. So that’s something that I think shows up. And maybe also, and this I think is a common one, whenever I’m going through a string of unforced errors or anything like that in tennis, it’s because I’m hitting the ball too early. I’m reaching for it; I’m not waiting for it. It’s not coming into my strike zone; I’m lurching forward for it instead of holding on a little bit.

Tim Ferriss: Do you do that with deal making or negotiating, things like that? Where else does that show up?

Soman Chainani: Yeah, I think sometimes it’s a tendency to want to jump at something. It’s a yes to everything. And I’m lucky to have the greatest agent ever, who weirdly enough is a lot younger than me and who basically doesn’t let me say yes to anything. He’s just like wait, hang on.

Tim Ferriss: Start with no and build from there.

Soman Chainani: Yeah, and it’s not just sayin yes. It’s like you have to wait until something actually excites you, you know?

Tim Ferriss: As another friend of mine, Derek Sivers, an entrepreneur, would say: it’s either a hell, yes or it’s a no; nothing in between. And that’s how he makes his binary decisions. But you brought up something that I really want to underscore for people who haven’t experienced it, perhaps, or who haven’t utilized it enough. This is a lesson that I revisit quite a lot and sometimes forget.

That is in general, U.S. culture talks a lot about mind over body and so on. But you can use body over mind in so much as the sports arena, the gym, the tennis court can be used, like you said, as a way of surfacing and working on weaknesses that then transfer to other areas. I have found that to be the case, which is one of the many reasons that when my exercise regimen is consistently on point, everything else improves or is easier. So that’s something that I’m focusing a lot on right now.

Alright, let’s dig into some of this other stuff. Where to even begin? I have so many notes in front of me. We talked about tennis; I want to talk about Walt Disney and Disney.

You are apparently obsessed with Disney, Disneyworld. Let’s talk about it. I’ll just let the door open and we can go from there.

Soman Chainani: I don’t know if it was by choice. I think what happened was we didn’t have TV growing up, we didn’t have cable, internet, any of the things grow up now.

Tim Ferriss: What did your parents do growing up?

Soman Chainani: My dad was in real estate and my mom was a very young mom; she had three kids by 23.

Tim Ferriss: Wow.

Soman Chainani: So there was a lot going on. She was trying to figure out how to raise three kids. And back then, you had your VCR and your TV that played a couple channels and that was it. We used to complain a lot to them that we had nothing to watch, we didn’t have a Nintendo; we didn’t have anything. So my grandparents finally relented and came home with the entire Disney animated collection on VHS, which was I think 27 movies or something like that.

And that is all I watched from age 6 or 7 until 15; that was all that was in the house. So that was our only source of entertainment. And so I think Disney at some level infected every cell of my brain and it became, for good or bad, sort of an essential part of how I thought about the world. And it was only later on, once I got to college I took a class, sort of a famous class at Harvard on fairy tales taught by a professor named Maria Tatar, who has become sort of like the most famous expert on fairy tales in the world.

And she exposed me to the original Grimm’s stories, which are horrific and dark and insane. And half the time, the evil character wins and half the time the good character wins. I think that gap between the Disney stories I grew up with and I took so seriously, and the real fairy tales, is where the School for Good and Evil started.

Because the question that kept sticking in my head is why did kids 200 years ago grow up with stories where the hero didn’t always win? Where the hero died a horrible death if they made a mistake, and we got these very sanitized version of the story where the hero always wins, even if the hero is not particularly smart. You look at The Little Mermaid , you look at the Lion King . Arielle should die brutally in that movie because she’s an idiot, a complete idiot.

The number of mistakes she makes in that movie doesn’t make any sense. Then to read the original Little Mermaid , where she dies at the end, suddenly made sense. And I think that’s where I started thinking okay, how do we get kids in our world to get the real stories? How do you get them to start reading something where good and evil are in balance, where it actually means something again?

And I think all of that stuff, and then the arrival of Potter, my knowledge of Disney; that all sort of played into what the School for Good and Evil ultimately became, which is a mix of all of that with an attempt to give fairy tales back to children and make them really think about what good and evil is.

Tim Ferriss: I remember reading the original Hansel and Gretel stories, a few variations. There’s an illustrated version people can check out if they want. They should read it before their kids read it, which I think Neil Gaiman played a part in which really underscores how brutal some of these stories were. I have thought a lot about Disney in the last few years, but I’ve thought about Disney more so in the capacity of Walt Disney. There’s a fantastic Walt Disney museum here in San Francisco.

Soman Chainani: Which I’m dying to come visit at some point.

Tim Ferriss: Oh, it’s so good and it looks at Walt Disney the thinker, Walt Disney the imaginer, etc. but also Walt Disney the technology innovator. Glenn Beck, of all people, has a book and he carried it with him for some period of time, and my understanding is that it expired Disneyworld; it’s The Garden Cities of Tomorrow .

Soman Chainani: Oh, I’ve read that book?

Tim Ferriss: You have? By Sir Ebenezer George Howard. Have you been to Disneyworld?

Soman Chainani: 40 times. Like I said, Disney was somebody that I admired so much that I came to a point where once you start admiring someone and studying them, you start to see your flaws. And that’s where you start to see the seeds of your own career. Because I think once you have an idol and you study them long enough, and you realize their weaknesses, you think oh, wait, I can come in here with my own voice and do something totally different that’s going to ultimately be its own thing.

So I studied all of that stuff. The most important thing that I was fascinated about with Disney was his desire to create his own city. He was obsessed with this idea of creating not just Disneyworld amusement park; he wanted his own model community that the rest of the world would then adopt. That’s what Epcot was supposed to be. It never ended up happening, and then for whatever reason, they abandoned it after his death.

I think once I’m done with School for Good and Evil, I’m dying to do another series that’s sort of analogous to this idea of what the perfect city of the future looks like.

Tim Ferriss: You bring up something I’d like to add to, which is the benefit, in a way, of Heroes with Clay Feet. People have probably heard the recommendation “never meet your heroes.” That is said because of the fear and the reality that oftentimes when you meet the people you most admire, they disappoint you in some way.

There is some type of flaw, there’s some type of weakness. The frame to have, I think, that is more enabling is the one that you just described. Actually, you’re allowed to be disappointed. You can be disappointed but even if you feel disappointed in some way, everyone is flawed and that should just encourage you because it humanizes them. You realize okay, they’re not some metaphorically some entrepreneur or fill in the blank who is hitting every foul shot 100 times out of 100.

It’s like no, they have real weaknesses. And that then, like you said, opens the door to the possibility that you could do something of that magnitude. So I find it really encouraging, in a way, when I explore the weaknesses of people that I really, really admire.

In any case, I appreciate you making that point; the paradox of heroes. If you have one, what is one of your favorite failures? Because I think a lot of people listening will think to themselves, good God; this guy seems to be a savant in everything; I don’t have those attributes. Let’s talk about some failure.

Soman Chainani: Oh God, there have been so many.

Tim Ferriss: Do you have a favorite failure? Meaning a failure that in retrospect really planted the seeds of later success?

Soman Chainani: You know, I think one small one and one big one. I had sort of tested School for Good and Evil at film school in a three-page treatment of the story. The professor was this ultra jockey, you’re talking patriarchal culture entrenching kind of guy.

I submitted it, and I went in to talk to him at office hours. He goes, “Let’s talk about this story you wrote about an Indian family.” And I said, “I didn’t write anything about an Indian family.” He didn’t have names on them, or he hadn’t looked at the names. He’s like, “Which one was yours?” And then he got distracted and was talking about how his favorite one was this one about fairy tales. And he’s like, “Whoever the girl that wrote it is, she has a future.”

I said, “That one’s mine.” His face just totally changed. He couldn’t get over the idea that I had written it. That a boy had written that story that had a female lead character, was set in the world of fairy tales. We never went over it because he couldn’t get over the shock of it. And there was something in that moment that I think I took badly. I think I got ashamed of it.

And had I reacted with a little more self confidence at 23 or 24, however old I was, I would have taken the positive comment he had given, more than the negative one. Do you know what I mean? But for some reason I felt embarrassed by it. But it was an important one. Because I think years later when I came back to it with a little more self esteem, out of all the kids in the class, he liked that one the best; why didn’t I run with it? It was a serious idea.

The failure that became the cornerstone of my life happened after I graduated film school. Which was I came out sort of the hot graduate. I got picked up by CAA, off a script that had won –

Tim Ferriss: For people who don’t know, sorry; just for context. The CAA is one of the largest talent agencies in the world, if not the largest. It’s CAA, WME, William Morris Endeavor; there are a handful of these UTA out there but CAA is one of the big mother ships.

Soman Chainani: So they had picked me up and the script had won a ton of stuff, and it had won this big grant. So I immediately got a studio deal out of England to make the movie for I think it was a $6 million budget, which is ridiculous for a graduate of film school.

Tim Ferriss: For a movie that you wrote?

Soman Chainani: For a movie I wrote. So it was almost like an autobiographical story at some level with some fantasy elements to it. So I moved to London. I spent a year and a half prepping it, doing all the work to get it ready. We had crews set up, we had a great cast; we had everything set. It was right at a bad time in the industry financially, and the studio had had three or four flops in a row. Then their big movie came out and died, and that was it. they went bankrupt six weeks before we were starting shooting. And that was it.

In a year and a half, I lost everything I had worked for all those years. I just didn’t know what to do, and I remember going home and that’s when I started tutoring and all that stuff. But the biggest thing that came out of there is I remember thinking never again; that’s never going to happen again. I’m never going to work on something for two years and put my life and soul in it and not have it see the light of day.

That’s when I realized there has to be a way you can control your IP. There has to be a way to control the creative property so that you can be in charge. That’s when I started thinking why don’t I go back to what I was always meant to do, which was fantasy. And what if I start with it as books first, what can I do? But even then I thought alright, say I write a book and it comes out and no one reads it; then we’re back at square one. So I did a lot of investigation into the kids’ book industry.

This is where I found sort of the magic secret. Which is I watched a lot of authors going on tour, who wrote kids’ and teen books. And if you’re a teen author, you tour like an adult author does. You just go to bookstores every night in different cities and you meet your fans. Which is great but if you don’t have any fans, then there’s no point. If you write for kids 8 to 12, you don’t go to bookstores. Instead, they send you send you to schools and you’re put in front of captive audiences anywhere from 200 to 1,000 kids at a time who don’t know anything about you.

And you get an hour to sell your book three times a day to three different schools. I thought okay, that I can do. If I write a book good enough, and you put me on tour and I get to see 3,000 kids a day, I can sell. That’s what got me going. I realized I could control the creative and the business side of it. And for someone who lives their life wanting to control, I saw a career waiting to happen.

It looks like an accident, I guess, but I had sort of seen how it could be done.

Tim Ferriss: I want to talk about the selling. The more I hear about three times a day 1,000 kids at a time, I’m like why have I not been choosing my genres more intelligently? Because you can show up to a gigantic book signing, even if you’ve had successful books, and have 12 people or two people. I remember going to the UK. Just as a contrast, I’ve never done what anyone would consider a book tour.

After the The Four Hour Workweek came out, and I went to the UK and I expected to have this fantastic launch, and it did pretty well. But they wanted to rely on everything that had happened in the U.S. I remember going to my first book signing that the publisher in the UK was handling. I showed up, and I don’t remember the exact name of the bookstore but I’d show up at 7:00 or 8:00 at night.

It’s raining outside, and literally over two hours, two people showed up; one person who was just wandering around and wanted to talk to me about things, anything unrelated to my book. And then one person who had already bought the book somewhere else.

Soman Chainani: You know, nothing brings you back to earth like the British.

Tim Ferriss: Oh, my God, it was just such a punch in the nuts. After that, I was like no more. Much like yourself, different context but I was like never again, ever, ever in my life am I going to have my head stuffed in the toilet this hard from an ego demolishing standpoint. But I digress.

Soman Chainani: I think it’s important because also, I think at some point all the principles that you believe in, and I’ve been reading your books for years and immediately sensed a fellow soul who is interested in the same things. All that stuff, kids need.

And the School for Good and Evil in a weird sense is kind of a fictionalized expression of all the stuff we’re talking about. It’s everything I believe in about the world and making your own destiny, and planning, and not fitting into society’s constructs. So people who want to raise their kids with those values I hope would then find interest in the books.

But at the same time, I think you’re due to write a kids’ version of yours. Because I just think teenagers more than anything need it, and parents will buy it because they know you. I think it’s coming.

Tim Ferriss: It might. I’ve been very intimidated, and I’m going to come back to the coming out of college and film school a quarter of a million dollars in debt because I think that’s an important topic to dig into.

I’ve been very intimidated in a very good way, some what I would call – and the genre names are confusing, so young adult fiction…

Soman Chainani: It’s 13 plus.

Tim Ferriss: Okay, 13 plus. When I picked up, this was, I don’t know 2005 – actually. I know exactly when it was. It was 2005 because it was when I was doing my walkabout around the world prior to the The Four Hour Workweek . When I was doing all my experiments I was in Panama. I was reading His Dark Materials ; Philip Pullman, The Golden Compass . I had to look up probably two or three words a page to define them for myself; nautical terms, all sorts of stuff. I remember wondering who the audience was.

Soman Chainani: Well, I’ll blow your mind on that one. Golden Compass and Philip Pullman is not young adult. That’s middle grade; that’s 8 to 12.

Tim Ferriss: What? I consider myself a pretty well educated guy.

Soman Chainani: No, he’s intense. He’s part of the whole specter that I aspire to as well. Which is if you look at Narnia , if you look at Golden Compass , even if you look at Potter, middle grade is where you find the books that really transcend to adults, as well.

Tim Ferriss: Is NeverEnding Story , would that be considered middle?

Soman Chainani: Yes, NeverEnding Story as well.

Tim Ferriss: That was my favorite book growing up for three or four years in elementary school.

Soman Chainani: It’s an amazing book. The thing with a lot of young adult is it’s there to gratify specific teenage impulses from 13 to 17, so it’s a very, very sort of melodramatic and romance-based at times. Romance becomes an essential element of it. Whereas in middle grade, you’ll often find the more high fantasy that you would also find in adult fiction.

Which is why I think often some of the best books that cross over, even like if you look at the best Neil Gaiman, like The Graveyard Book , these are middle grade books.

Tim Ferriss: My favorite audio book of all time, probably, is read by Neil himself. It’s so good.

Soman Chainani: That’s also why I love this genre. School for Good and Evil, for instance, the number of adult fans we have is insane. There’s no way we would sell as much as we have sold and been able to do what we have done without adult readers. What happens is the kids get obsessed, and then they give it to their parents. The parents read it and then they start getting into it. The trick with the middle grade series is that the first book has to be a little younger. That’s why the first Harry Potter book –

Tim Ferriss: So they can grow into the rest of the series?

Soman Chainani: It has to feel like a kids’ book. It has to get the kids into it at some level. And then you can start getting deeper and deeper.

That’s sort of how it’s done. Which is why even if you look at His Dark Materials , Golden Compass is a little bit easier but then two and three are intense.

Tim Ferriss: Tough. You mentioned controlling your IP, your intellectual property so that you would be the master of your fate more than you had been when this film evaporated in front of you that you were going to work on. Golden Compass , one of my favorite books in that genre…

Soman Chainani: Oh, God, I know where we’re going.

Tim Ferriss: One of the worst movies I’ve ever seen in my life, and I was so fucking enraged when I came out of that theater. I was like, how could you? How could you? I was so upset that they tried to cram one and a half, or two of these gigantic, gorgeous books into 90 minutes or whatever it was; it just infuriated me. What have you done, or how do you think about protecting the integrity of your work?

How do you go about ensuring that is likely to be the case? I’m not going to generalize, but yes I am; I’m going to. You don’t want to take people’s word for it in Hollywood or anywhere else. There are too many players; there are too many cooks in the kitchen. So what do you do?

Soman Chainani: The first thing I do is I have this piece of paper. And any time I get on the phone with anyone from LA, I put it on my wall and it says “They are lying.” I’ve been doing that for about three years and it really makes a difference. Because they are lying. They are saying whatever they need to say. The great thing about Hollywood is once you figure out it is essentially the same kind of engine as the political system, designed to slow things down, designed to make things move as slowly as possible, and you start to realize it’s essentially like working with Congress; then for some reason you start to accept it a little more.

I think the difference with me is I come from that world, right? I’d gone to film school, I’d come out and been involved with not just the movie that had evaporated, but I was getting offered a lot of projects at that time. So I had met a lot of people. So when it came to selling the rights to School for Good and Evil, I got to pick who it was. I didn’t just go with whoever gave the best offer. I put together the producing team, which was Jane Starts who did Ella Enchanted and Tuck Everlasting and is known for putting together the most faithful children’s adaptations of all classic books.

That’s her reputation. And then put her together with Joe Roth, who is Alice in Wonderland , Maleficent , Snow White and the Huntsman , who is the big blockbuster fairy tale producer.

That combination has been kind of the magic bullet. Because A) I got to make sure I wrote the first couple drafts of the script to make sure that we were in the right direction before I stepped off to keep working on the books. And then I made sure we took on a new screenwriter who would put in the studio’s notes who also loved the books, who turned out to be right now David McGee, who wrote Finding Neverland , Life of Pi , and is doing the new Mary Poppins for Disney. And his daughters loved the books.

So I’ve been reading every single draft of the script. I’ve been involved every step of the way. And as of now, it could not be more faithful to the books. That is not to say that it will not end up being the worst movie of all time that has nothing to do with the series. But all you can do as an author, I would say the advice would be hold onto it until you put together the right team yourself. You don’t just hand it over.

Tim Ferriss: Whether it’s through social engineering and just managing relationships in a particular way, how do you minimize the likelihood of really stupid studio notes getting forced into your script?

Soman Chainani: I think for that, time has helped because of social media. The fan base of the series is getting bigger and bigger by the day. They have learned from too many things like Golden Compass or Beautiful Creatures , or movies where the fans revolted before it ever came out. You have to have the fans onboard because at the end of the day, they’re the ones who are going to make all the noise. My biggest goal when I wrote Good and Evil was look, the way to make a success is not necessarily to have the most readers straight off the bat but to have the most passionate ones.

Tim Ferriss: They become your marketing force, right?

Soman Chainani: That’s it, and that’s everything. To this day, I spend at least half an hour a day doing fan engagement to make sure that the people who love the books most get as much access as possible.

Tim Ferriss: What have you found most effective for that, in that half hour?

Soman Chainani: It’s tricky because with 8 to 12… Our core fan base I don’t think is really 8 to 12; it’s more like 10 to 15. But I think they are not on social media so much. They’re not on Twitter, they’re not on Instagram. So we built an interactive website that I think is the best of any kids’ series in the world in terms of how complex and how much it offers. There are 18 moderated chat rooms, there are games, there are contests every week, there’s a YouTube channel; there’s so much for them to do there. There’s a forum in the chat forums called Questions for Soman, and they can ask me questions any time I want, and I go on half an hour a day and answer them all.

Tim Ferriss: Got it; it’s centralized.

I’m going to lay this out. I’m looking at some specs, your player stats. These aren’t really stats but you write a 500 to 700 page book, you tour 60 to 80 days, film a weekly YouTube show, work on film, manage the business side of the School for Good and Evil. Plus, parenthetical you’re single at the moment, which is a part-tim job in and of itself.

Soman Chainani: In New York, which is not just a part-time; it’s like death of your soul.

Tim Ferriss: You also have a New York that is a whole, separate… you have an extra layer of paradox of choice plan shopping issue. There’s an abundance of riches in some respects that makes it challenging. But what does your time management look like? What are the keys to your time management? What do you do differently? I know that’s a lot of questions but I’d love for you to describe how you keep things in order and prioritized.

Soman Chainani: There are a few tricks.

The big trick is one day a week is where anything non essential happens. So if I have to meet my agent, or get a haircut, or go do some press thing, or a radio interview or something; all of that happens on one day. So everything gets shoved into usually Tuesday. Tuesday becomes the funnel day for anything –

Tim Ferriss: Miscellaneous.

Soman Chainani: Yeah. And so I think that becomes the main day. Then for me, it’s all about segments. The core anchors of my day are I play tennis in the morning, usually at 7. I work out with my trainer at 2. And just having those two anchors makes everything go so much smoother. Because then I have a big block in the morning from 8:30 to 1 to write and manage whatever else I have to, and then after I train, from 3:30 to 6.

That becomes the way I manage time. Also, you’re fueled from those two workouts; you come back ready to go. You’re just like in it. So I always feel like I’m operating on pure adrenaline at any given time, and operating very single-mindedly on something. Then I try to finish working by 7. Because I also think if you work too late, it ruins the work the next day.

Tim Ferriss: Are there any particular tools you use to help you manage all of this?

Soman Chainani: I’ve had fights with friends over this who think I should use a calendar. When we were growing up, my dad never used a calendar for his business; he just wasn’t into it. He just felt like he could keep everything in his head. And I don’t know, it’s how he grew up, it’s how I grew up.

I never kept track of my homework in school; I never wrote stuff down. So I don’t have a calendar, which is so ridiculous to say out loud but I don’t have a calendar.

Tim Ferriss: Now, is that a reflection of just having a prodigious memory or is it a reflection of it being more free flowing? Do you wake up in the morning knowing exactly what you’re going to do in those two major blocks of time?

Soman Chainani: Yeah, I think that’s it. I think it’s because I know the anchors; I know what’s happening. Obviously, if I’m scheduling a trip for April or something, I’ll have it written down somewhere.

Tim Ferriss: As an exercise, today is Tuesday. Today is your odds and ends day. What does tomorrow look like for you, and what are your key priorities, if you can talk about them.

Soman Chainani: I usually get up at about 6, and then what do I do in the morning? I’ll meditate for about 15 minutes.

Tim Ferriss: What type of meditation? How do you meditate?

Soman Chainani: That will take us down a whole rabbit hole.

Tim Ferriss: We’ll come back to that. I’ll bookmark that. So 15 minutes of meditation.

Soman Chainani: I start my day every day; I boil water, and I put a towel on my head and I inhale steam. Because for some reason, it gets the sweat going and somehow clears out my head. I don’t know; it’s just something I do.

Tim Ferriss: I like it.

Soman Chainani: It always works and it just feels like you went to a sauna in your house. Then I’ll eat, grab a juice from the place next door, and then get to tennis by 7. I’ll get home by 8:30; I’ll be writing by 9. Right now I’m working on revisions to the first ten chapters of book four. So I’ll do that until about 1. Then I’ll eat. Then I’ll go meet my trainer.

Tim Ferriss: Do you have a set lunch that you have?

Soman Chainani: We were talking about this before we came on. I can’t cook, and I just don’t have time to think about food. So I have tried every meal delivery service in New York City and I use Portable Chef, which is really good.

It’s basically like a customized personal chef and they deliver all your meals for the day the day before so everything is set for you. That one’s really great. Heart and Belly is really good. It’s not like Blue Apron or something like that where you have to have pots.

Tim Ferriss: It’s minimal. So you heat it up and you’re ready to go?

Soman Chainani: Ready to go. Then I’ll go train with Trainer Dave, as I call him, from 2 until about 3:30. Then from 4 to 6:30 or 7 is that second block where right now, it will still be revising. But inevitably, there’s business stuff, too so I try to do that in a solid hour, as well. And then because I work in my apartment most of the time, after 7 I leave. I never am at home after 7. I always go out or do something, see friends, or go on a bad date.

Tim Ferriss: What are your favorite ways to wind down after a day?

Soman Chainani: I think it’s just talking to people. The good thing about having lived in New York for 15 years is I’ve met so many cool people. I try to go see a show, go see a movie. I have a lot of actor friends who are in things so there’s always something happening.

Tim Ferriss: Something premiering. Do you have any pre-bed rituals, or anything that you do typically before bed?

Soman Chainani: If I really want to sleep well, then I’ll stop watching anything by 10, even 9:30. Because I’d rather read than watch TV. Because for some reason, I just have a very sort of open, spongy brain and if I watch TV too close to bed, that’s what I’m going to dream about when I’d rather not be dreaming about the Real Housewives of New York .

Tim Ferriss: What are you reading at the moment, or what’s the last book you found memorable?

Soman Chainani: I’ve read this book three times, now and I’m trying to stop rereading it but I think it may be the best book I’ve ever read. It’s called A Little Life , by Hanya Yanagihara.

Tim Ferriss: The Little Life?

Soman Chainani: A Little Life . It’s big. It’s almost 700 pages. But I think it was nominated for the Pulitzer or something, and it’s just incredible. It’s about these four male friends who grew up in New York City together, and it’s tracking their life from when they’re 20 to 60. For anybody who loves to have a bigger view of what life is, and look beyond – again, the matrix of what life is supposed to look like according to society, that book will just completely ravage your brain.

I give it to so many people and never once has anyone come back to me and not said “that changed my life.”

Tim Ferriss: I think that might be the title of this podcast episode: Ravaging your Brain with Soman. So a few things. The first is meditation. What type of meditation? Or describe your meditation.

Soman Chainani: It’s super simple. It’s just going to sound a little crazy to everyone because I’ve been doing this for a long time. I remember I read the Tao Te Ching when I was 23 or 24 and going through a rough time after the movie had collapsed, or maybe it was a little later.

Tim Ferriss: So a copy of that also six inches from my left thigh.

Soman Chainani: I remember reading it and being like okay, this makes no sense. But you just keep reading it again and again and slowly, I started to get the point of it which is thank God I play tennis.

But it was saying the same thing that I talked about to you about tennis earlier, which is there should not be any decisions. It should be automatic. It’s not automatic because there is something in the way and the thing in your way is the I, the ego, your self consciousness.

So every meditation I’ve done since then, and it’s now been ten years, it’s 15 minutes of trying to find the I, that sort of energy that makes up that conscious will inside of me and realizing that that’s actually the place that you do not want to operate from; that that is actually an illusion. That’s just residual anger and frustration and your inability to control things in the world. So all of my meditation is recognizing the I that you operate from and the world tells you to operate from, and realizing that that’s what you have to let go of.

Tim Ferriss: When you sit down, assuming you’re sitting, are you then – I’d like you to get as concrete as you can and describe it. Are you imagining the me, so to speak, in parenthesis sitting behind the I and trying to visually or graphically observe it?

Are you observing the words in your head as a detached third party? What are you doing, exactly?

Soman Chainani: It’s more like trying to sense the me. Just sort of thinking okay, where is I? Where is I in my body right now and trying to actually imagine your entire perception, your entire consciousness; everything that’s in your mind, everything that’s in your body, everything that’s in your thoughts right now is that I and realizing that all of it is actually wrong. All of it is energy that you’re holding that needs to be let go of.

And what you really want is empty space. I think the line in the Tao Te Ching that stuck with me the most is why is there something when there should be nothing? It’s that whole idea of the true, happy human is clear; there shouldn’t be anything there. So that’s what the meditation is.

It’s trying to find the I, that center of me. I could actually identify what the me is, and realizing that that needs to be let go.

Tim Ferriss: So you’re very self directed, even in lacking a calendar. I hope the studio has a good key manager in its view. It’s a great point of leverage, though, having this entire world you’ve created inside your own head, not without its risks. You mentioned having a trainer. In doing some of my review before this, you appear to train exclusively with trainers. I am almost the opposite, so I’d love to hear why that is.

Soman Chainani: Wait, first tell me why you’re the opposite?

Tim Ferriss: It’s not entirely… it’s changed a bit in the last few years. I’ve realized that there are certain types of physical movement that I view as physical recreation, not primarily training. So I’m not using them to lose body fat, or fill in the blank; like acro yoga, acrobatic yoga, partner gymnastics, that type of thing. There are certain instances where you need a technical coach; tennis, gymnastics strength training. In those instances I will have a coach, whether I’m using video or otherwise.

But training for me, exercise has always been my me-time, my meditative time to live in the present moment and very often use some type of cadence. I never thought of it this way, doing this until maybe a few years ago but a mantra of sorts, where I’m simply counting, say, the seconds up, seconds down of a particular lift, or the number of repetitions. That, for me, is my mental palate cleanser for the day. For a very long time, it was my version, in a sense, of meditation.

So I didn’t want to banter with someone else. I didn’t want to have any type of sensory input from someone else. That’s why I train by myself.

Soman Chainani: That’s so interesting.

Tim Ferriss: That’s still the case with, say, weight lifting unless it is a very technical skill and I’m working with someone for, say, an Olympic weight lifting movement where the penalty of doing it incorrectly is so high and you really require a separate set of eyes to correct because what you think you’re doing is probably not what you’re doing, at least in the beginning. So that’s why I’ve always trained alone. And, I like to train late. I love to train at 9, 10, 11 p.m. for a host of reasons.

Soman Chainani: I have a theory, though. I think that you might instinctively be what I call a somatic person, which is when it comes to anything in the body, you want to push yourself.

You won’t let yourself get away with incorrect form, or not pushing yourself to the max when you do a workout.

Tim Ferriss: That’s true.

Soman Chainani: Which is not me. Mentally when I’m working on a book or something, I will die to make sure it’s perfect; to make sure it’s exactly right. But when I get to a workout, my instinctive thing, just because I grew up like the kid who never thought he was ever going to be strong, who kids always made fun of for being skinny. So when it came to lifting weights and things like that, I came in scared.

And I always bailed before it ever got heavy, thinking I’m too weak to do this or whatever. I need trainers to push me at some level. I need them to say this is what you’re doing and we’re not getting out of it. Because if it was just me, I don’t know. I don’t think it would be the same.

It also lets me have one moment of the day when I’m not in charge, which is nice.

Tim Ferriss: Right, right. This makes a lot of sense. This could lead into all sorts of relationship discussions.

Soman Chainani: All sorts of of interesting things.

Tim Ferriss: How many trainers have you worked with, or is it always the same person or handful of people?

Soman Chainani: I work with the same trainer in New York.

Tim Ferriss: Trainer Dave.

Soman Chainani: Trainer Dave. His name is Dave Stogsdil at CrossFit NYC.

Tim Ferriss: Oh, boy. He’s about to get a lot busier.

Soman Chainani: He is an absolute genius. I chose him the same way I chose my agent, which you’re going to laugh at but I chose them both by their photo. And I think it’s because I spent so much time casting movies that I’m very good at just when I see a photo, or maybe I spent too much time on Tinder or something, but I know when I see a photo that that’s the person. So I remember going through all the CrossFit gyms in New York, and looking at photos and I saw his.

And I was like, that’s the right guy.

Tim Ferriss: Hold on; I have to pause, here. Is this purely subconscious or is what you do a teachable skill, do you think?

Soman Chainani: No, I think it’s instinct. With trainers, I was looking for a softness.

Tim Ferriss: Kind eyes type of thing?

Soman Chainani: Yeah, like a non-bro bro. Do you know what I mean?

Tim Ferriss: Right. Yes, I do.

Soman Chainani: And that’s him. He’s the guy you go to if you are coming at weight training not from the broiest place.

Tim Ferriss: What do you do when you’re on the road?

Soman Chainani: Then I get a trainer every single city, every single day. It’s a bit obsessive, but…

Tim Ferriss: How do you find them and how do you choose? Are they all photograph-based?

Soman Chainani: No, that’s too much work.

That the assistant does. She’s pretty good at knowing what to look for now because I’ve been on enough tours. And I’ll be like that one was great; that one wasn’t that great. She’s started to get a sense of what I’m looking for. But I’ve worked with so many different trainers. I think what makes Dave so great is he figured out very early on that it wasn’t just going to be cross fit that I needed, but he’s mixed in a ton of GST stuff, which is gymnastics strength training; a lot of Z health stuff which is like exercises that also complement my brain neurology.

He’s very good at customizing based on your personality, what your goal is. He knows not to give me intense conditioning pieces because I can out-cardio anyone on the planet; it’s just the way I was born. He’s focusing on my weaknesses.

Tim Ferriss: Got it. I’m not going to spend too much time on trainers because there are so many other places I want to dig. A quarter of a million dollars in debt, that’s a fuck ton of money after the undergrad and the MFA. How did you end your family, make the decision to go so far into debt? Because in the U.S., and I think this is dangerous on a lot of levels, at least in Silicon Valley there’s a very romanticized anti college notion. I do think that student debt can be a paralyzing problem for many people. How did you and your family decide to go that far into debt? And I don’t know if it was you, or you and your family; I don’t know how that was arranged.

Soman Chainani: At some level, Indian families are a lot like Jewish families and other cultures that put a primacy on education. Where there is this expectation that your family will pay for school.

My dad was going through a hard time in the ‘80s because he was in real estate and that’s when the market was tanking. He took on a lot of debt himself in order to pay for Harvard. So I don’t think where Harvard is where the main source of debt came from. The main source of debt came from film school and there was no way he was going to pay for that, or I was going to let him.

So it was just my decision, really, to basically be like okay, I was so deluded, I guess, into thinking that somehow I was going to pay it back. I look at some of the kids who came out of film school and are saddled with so much debt now, and I just don’t know what you do. I was lucky enough to discover tutoring, which paid really, really well. I was lucky to get a ton of clients and do really well at it. that’s what got me through, and ultimately the book deal helped me pay the rest off.

But it is a gamble that is not wise, I think.

Tim Ferriss: Now we’re getting to the next question, so much like college has lost its luster for a lot of people, although I do generally think that if you can get into a top tier name recognizable brand, which sounds terrible, but whether it’s undergrad or, say, MBA then it can be worth it sometimes.

Soman Chainani: I agree with you.

Tim Ferriss: The MFA, film school, is also one of those divisive topics where a lot of successful filmmakers will say ah, waste of time. But then there are many successful film makers who come out of film school. Aspiring film maker, about to graduate from undergrad or has already graduated from undergrad, did decently well in however you want to think about that; should I go to film school?

They love film. Maybe they’ve done a few short films in some elective classes in college but their major was something else. Should they go to film school? What do you say to that person, or what do you ask them? What’s the conversation?

Soman Chainani: What would I say now? I would have such specific advice now, which is only go to film school if you can get into USC. That would be my only advice. And the reason why is the industry has changed so much to basically eliminate independent film. So that the only productive education you’re going to get in film school that will lead you to a Hollywood career at some level is to be in southern California at USC or maybe UCLA where you have studio connections and are working with studio professors.

And if you’re good enough, you might get seen. That’s what I would say. Because when I went to Columbia, it was in the heyday of independent film, at some level.

And so a lot of the great things that happened to me at Columbia were because I had access to all the successful independent directors and producers who loved my work, and therefore introduced me to all these great people. All those people now are having trouble making films, of course, because there’s no outlet for them. So they’ve all gone to television or whatever.

So film, if you want to work in film, we’re talking working in the studio world which means you’ve got to be in LA. You have to be at one of those two film schools. But otherwise, I would say I don’t think there’s a need for it. I don’t think you need to go to film school. I think you just need to make work.

Tim Ferriss: The USC reference or recommendation with caveats makes me think of Stanford, also, in my backyard here in the Bay Area.

Certainly as a competent computer science major, the demand for engineers so outstrips supply it’s just ludicrous. But if you want to be part of the Silicon Valley tech scene and you’re debating between different undergrad options, then Silicon Valley and being based in Palo Alto where you have all of the venture capitalists literally in the same town, or right next door can give you a huge leg up, similarly, depending on which facet of the business you want to be a part of.

Soman Chainani: Because I helped so many kids with their college applications over the years, Stanford was the one school I rarely, rarely, let them apply to.

Tim Ferriss: Why is that?

Soman Chainani: I said it was too hard.

Tim Ferriss: Too hard?

Soman Chainani: I said the problem with Stanford… the college application game is very simple. Whichever school you apply to early, you better be fairly sure you have a good shot at getting in.

When you apply early, your chances of getting in are much better. But you have to at least be in the game to get in. Stanford’s acceptance rate is so low, and everybody applying to Stanford is so good and so smart that to get in takes an act of God. You’d better be a real miracle of nature. So it was the one school I recommended; more often than not I said you are throwing away your application because they don’t take anyone. It’s harder than Harvard, it’s harder than Yale, it’s harder than any school. To me, Stanford is the top school in the country right now.

Tim Ferriss: It’s a great school. Their business school program is also outstanding. I considered it. I always thought I should have gone to Stanford, had I been able to get in. I applied early to Princeton, got accepted; ended up having a very difficult time at Princeton. Always thought you know, I would have been much better off having gone to a Brown or a Stanford.

Soman Chainani: Yeah, because Princeton is very square.

Tim Ferriss: Yeah. I don’t know if I’ve ever talked about this publicly. I don’t know if you’re familiar with the very weird eating club, social club structure at Princeton.

Soman Chainani: Yes, absolutely.

Tim Ferriss: In effect, for people who aren’t familiar with this, you have a street that is lined with gigantic mansions. That is where the partying happens, generally.

Soman Chainani: Welcome to Princeton; parties of [inaudible] –

[Crosstalk]

Tim Ferriss: You have gigantic mansions. They’re all stylistically different, which is very odd. So you have kind of an old, tiny, blue blood, New England rich mansion. Then you’ll have Colonial style, kind of Georgia belle from old money mansion. And it goes on and on; it’s a very odd place. They’re effectively co-ed fraternities is the easiest way to describe it, where you also eat meals.

Some of these eating clubs, it’s just mind blowing. Like Ivy, for instance, I believe has an endowment, so to speak, that is larger than some name brand universities in the United States. It’s just mind blowing. I ended up trying to fit in in some of these eating clubs and getting very disillusioned and unhappy, and then joining an eating club called Terrace. So Terrace, to give you an idea, had a rainbow flag flying out front.

Soman Chainani: I would have loved it.

Tim Ferriss: I’m not gay but it’s basically like your Tuesday. It’s where the odds and ends, the people who didn’t fit in anywhere else ended up going. It was the one thing – I don’t give any money for Princeton for reasons that you guys can look up. If you want to read “Some Practical Thoughts on Suicide,” an essay that I wrote, that will give you an idea why I don’t give money to Princeton. But I do give money to Terrace because it saved me. Anyway, I’m not sure how I got onto that.

I didn’t fit in in any way at Princeton whatsoever.

Soman Chainani: This is important because I think most of your listeners at some level, regardless of whether on the outside they fit in or not, I think inside they don’t which is why they’re looking for something different. And that’s also why I wrote the books. When I was growing up, there were no books for the odds and ends. The hero always won. It was always the good looking guy. Even if you read Harry Potter, he’s always the good kid, he always does the right thing; you know he’s going to win at the end because there’s no version of Potter where Harry ends up in a pool of blood and Voldemort goes kicking into the sunset.

I’ve wanted to write a book that questioned all those assumptions at some level, and said what about us? What about us weirdoes who root for the villains, or us weirdoes who don’t think evil is what evil is made out to me and that good often is not good, and all those big questions.

It’s why I think I’ve always been attracted to your work and people like you at some levels because that questioning reality and what the structure is is so important. I think kids are helpless to do that. If we can train them not to through books, because that’s our No. 1 medium to get to them, it’s a big deal which is why I take what I do, like I said, too seriously, probably.

Tim Ferriss: I think anyone who’s really good at what they do, really, really good, tends to have a certain degree of pathological obsession with what they do. If you had to recommend books on writing, or books that would help someone’s writing, is there a short list? Are there any that come to mind? And I’m not going to make it genre-specific on purpose. It could be anything. For instance, I’m a nonfiction writer at this point.

But Bird by Bird by Anne Lamott, which is written for fiction writers, really, I found just the best – the cheapest therapy that money could buy.

Soman Chainani: That one’s an amazing book. I’m less interested in books specifically about writing because I think writing, to me, is like breathing. You write the way you breathe. Everybody has their own way of doing it. every true writer has to write to stay alive because that’s how we live. That’s our connection to the cosmos. And so every writer has their specific process. I don’t get so much out of writer books. What I do get out of books are two things. One, books about creativity and sort of creative spirit, and then documentaries about creative process. Those are the two things I look at.

One of my favorite books is called The Spark . It’s written by Cirque du Soleil, of all companies.

Tim Ferriss: Oh, very cool. I love Cirque du Soleil.

Soman Chainani: They have a book called The Spark , about where their ideas come from. It’s very short; you can read it in 20 minutes. But it’s fantastic and it gets to this idea that so much of creativity is about the fact that we try to control it. again, it goes back to that idea of the I that I’m trying to get rid of. That if we just let go of this idea of the conscious I trying to control when we work creatively, that’s when the universe comes rushing through.

So it’s about almost making yourself into a clear vessel and accepting that it’s going to come. I think one of the great things about writing a series is that now that I’m on book four, and I’ve settled into a rhythm, I start to trust myself. And when I trust myself is when the great stuff happens because I’m not monitoring, I’m not judging.

Tim Ferriss: Right, you’re not editing when you’re generating.

Soman Chainani: Not editing. And I’m getting twist after twist where every chapter is ending in a twist like I never predicted. The character is doing something I never had any idea they would do, and it’s happening. Versus the first couple books, the first three books where it’s every chapter, one twist or whatever. Now, it’s constantly, constantly, because I’m allowing myself to take things in new direction. And along with The Spark , they’ve got a cool documentary. I think it’s called The Fire Within , that follows eight people who try out for Cirque du Soleil. It’s a wonderful Canadian documentary about people passionate about their art.

And then the other thing is I’m obsessed with documentaries about creative process, specifically about fashion designers. Because if you look at fashion, it’s where you get 100 percent undiluted creativity because it’s on such a short cycle with all the different fashion shows.

Tim Ferriss: It’s also, in a sense, purely subjective which adds to the creativity by necessity in some respects.

Soman Chainani: Yes, and so you get to watch these madcap geniuses who aren’t constrained. Because again, it’s subjective so they can do whatever they want because people have already judged them to be geniuses at some level. So you get these amazing things. Things like Dior and I , or Valentino the Last Emperor , or Lagerfeld Confidential .

Tim Ferriss: If you had to pick one of those three for a non fashion… I’m the most disheveled, unfashionable person you could possibly imagine. Which of those three should I start with?

Soman Chainani: Let me give you another one. Let me give you one I think is the best of them all; it’s called Ballet 422 , and it’s on Netflix. American Ballet Theater has a choreographic internship that I think is the most prestigious choreographic award a young person can win. People compete from all over the world for it, I think.

The person who won it one year was someone inside their own company, who was just sort of a middling dancer in their company and who was only 24, which I think is the youngest they’ve ever given it to. It tracks his internship and his choreographic process. When you meet him, you think he’s a complete yahoo. He doesn’t seem smart, he doesn’t seem charismatic. The guy’s name is Justin Peck. You don’t see why they gave it to him. You’re just watching this movie thinking it’s dull; watching paint dry.

Because there’s no narration. It’s 100 percent watching this guy work. About 15 or 20 minutes into it, you start to see him at work and you start to realize slowly by slowly, you are watching a genius. You’re watching like a Mozart who is just gifted with something that is absolutely unrivaled. It’s only like an hour and ten minutes but it’s the best hour and ten minutes you’ll ever spend because you get to see true genius in process without any editorializing.

Tim Ferriss: Ballet 422 .

Soman Chainani: Ballet 422 , and he’s since become the best choreographer in the world.

Soman Chainani: And he’s young. You get to watch it happen. It’s completely amazing.

Tim Ferriss: I love it. Have you seen… and it’s a bit of a – I use this in a loving way – bumbling documentary. It doesn’t take itself too seriously but there are aspects of it that I found so hilarious that I could charge through it. but Six Days to Air ?

Soman Chainani: No, tell me about it.

Tim Ferriss: It’s about the South Park team putting together an episode from scratch, zero, nothing to shipping, finished product for air in six days.

Soman Chainani: Oh, see that I’d love.

Tim Ferriss: After they went to – I’m so out of La Look at Land, maybe they went to the Emmys, perhaps? I’ll just say they went to the Emmys, the Golden Globes or something in women’s dresses on acid.

They committed to each other that every time they were interviewed on the red carpet they could talk about anything except for the dresses. They couldn’t even make mention of the fact that they were in dresses. And they were on acid. They get back to the office and they’re like, holy fuck, we only have six days to ship a new episode; better get to work on that. And then it’s just crunch time, all nighters, insanity.

Soman Chainani: That’s being watched tonight. It sounds so good. That kind of stuff where you get to see how the sausage is made is really the only type of documentary I want to watch. There’s another one that everybody should watch called Theater of War , about the making of Mother Courage when they did it in Central Park with Meryl Streep. It’s the only time Meryl Streep has ever let anybody film her rehearsing, ever.

She said she didn’t want to do it because she said rehearsal looks like bad acting. And she goes, “I don’t want to see me doing bad acting.” Then she changed her mind and thought it might be valuable.

And to get to watch Meryl Streep’s rehearsal process, you realize how much of writing in the beginning, how much of acting in the beginning, all of it is bad. It’s just about doing all the bad stuff to get to the good stuff.

Tim Ferriss: For sure.

Soman Chainani: Yeah, that’s another great one.

Tim Ferriss: I love it. Alright, I’ve been making a list of docs to watch. I was already on this yesterday in my mind so now I have a bunch of new ones to work on. Let me jump to I suppose what I always call rapid fire questions, but your answers don’t need to be short or rapid. What book of books have you given the most to other people, if you have, besides your own.

Soman Chainani: I would say A Little Life , for sure and then a book called The Velvet Rage .

Tim Ferriss: The Velvet Rage .

Soman Chainani: The Velvet Rage , which is ostensibly about if you grow up a gay man, like how to deal with it in the world. But I think it’s more about modern masculinity and about what it means to be a man in America.

Tim Ferriss: So even for a hetero normative…

Soman Chainani: I think so. I think so. The one thing A Little Life and that book share in common is an attempt to deconstruct what the tenets of being a man are in this country because I think it ultimately restricts emotional health. I think both those books give you a window into an alternative.

Tim Ferriss: If you wanted a different shade of grey in a book with all your spare time that you might enjoy, that a number of my friends, male and female, have just found extremely powerful is Tribe , by Sebastian Junger.

Soman Chainani: [Inaudible].

Tim Ferriss: I found it to be just a fantastic and thought provoking book that helps to explain a lot of what we see in the world. And it might add just a different lens through with to look at that, as well.

Soman Chainani: Fantastic.

Tim Ferriss: What is the best investment you’ve ever made? And that could be energy, time, money, or any other resource. I’ll give you an example. So for instance, Amelia Boone is a three-time world’s toughest mudder champion, also a power attorney at Apple; just a killer cyborg. I asked her this question and she said it was the entrance fee for her world’s toughest mudder, or it might have been her first very toughest mudder.

In either case, the fee was $450.00 which for her at the time was actually a stretch. But if she hadn’t done that, this entire other career and life for her wouldn’t have opened. Does anything come to mind for you? It doesn’t have to be the best but it could be one of the best investments.

Soman Chainani: This is so small but it made such a big difference in my life, which was that I had struggled with acne for a lot of my teenage years, and it was something I couldn’t get rid of. And as an adult., just having breakouts and stuff. It starts to get in your head a little bit that you couldn’t get rid of it. and so you try everything. That’s the problem when you’re built like me and a lot of your listeners, you try every effing thing. So you’re going to doctor after doctor. You’re trying antibiotics, you’re trying creams, you’re trying every kind of soap. And I just had had it; I just gave up.

Then I read this story in the Times about a company that had started. It was called AOBiome, I think.

Tim Ferriss: Okay. Yes, absolutely.

Soman Chainani: I became one of their early adopters. I was one of the first ten people to try the product.

Tim Ferriss: Could you describe for people? This was my year without soap, or something like that.

Soman Chainani: So you’ve done it.

Tim Ferriss: I actually got a prototype sample of AOBiome way back in the day, which is its own story. But can you describe for people… Well, you could take a stab at it, I could take a stab at it but could you describe for people what this is? It’s not antibacterial, for sure.

Soman Chainani: No, it’s the opposite. Tell me if I’m wrong. As far as I know, it’s a probiotic spray. It’s a spray that’s just pure water and bacteria that’s supposed to naturally reside in your skin. Their hypothesis was animals don’t use soap and don’t really have skin issues as regularly as humans do because they have a certain kind of bacteria that sort of oxidizes all the bad bacteria.

So they created this bacterial spray that they said all you need to do is throw out all your soap, any cream, anything you’ve ever used in your entire life and just use this. You don’t even have to shower and you potentially would be fine. So I was desperate. And so I became one of their first customers, tried it. Within three days my skin was clear and I’ve been using it three and a half years. They are now called Mother Dirt; they’ve changed their name.

Tim Ferriss: Oh, Mother Dirt.

Soman Chainani: Yeah, because AO Plus Biome was not all marketable.

Tim Ferriss: Yeah, it doesn’t roll off the tongue.

Soman Chainani: And they have a shaving cream now that you can use, they have a shampoo that you can use that is bacterial friendly. And man, it made a difference, let me tell you that. It just changed everything. Forget the skin thing; that’s just superficial. But to realize that the problems you were chasing for ten years or more could be solved by your own body and by something that was natural already, that theoretically you don’t even need the mist at some level.

Like if I don’t have it for a week, I just don’t use soap and then my skin stays completely fine.

Tim Ferriss: Definitely.

Soman Chainani: That was a big shift.

Tim Ferriss: And it’s called Mother Dirt, now?

Soman Chainani: Mother Dirt. MotherDirt.com.

Tim Ferriss: So if people want to read the New York Times piece, the New York Times does what I do, which is confusing sometimes. They’ll use a different headline online versus in the print edition and then it makes things very confusing people. It’s the “My No Soap, No Shampoo Bacteria Rich Hygiene Experiment.” I think the author’s name is Julia Scott. Discovers what she smells like after 28 soapless days. It’s fascinating. It’s really, really fascinating.

Soman Chainani: It’s great. Everyone should be on this product. I feel like it’s am k that’s going to explode soon.

Tim Ferriss: What other tricks do you have like that? Do you have any other expedient solutions to common problems like that?

Soman Chainani: Let me think. You know, I feel like everyone’s stress goes somewhere in their body. Like some people get back pain and that becomes their big thing. With me, usually it was always skin until that was solved. And then I guess when I was younger, it was stomach.

Tim Ferriss: Yeah, one of my best friends has that. He always gets stomach issues.

Soman Chainani: Stomach issues and also because I was on antibiotics for the skin problems when I was a teenager, so that was something that stuck around. Again, I did a lot of research and realized that you can take a daily probiotic but that probably wont be enough. So I sort of cobbled together my own probiotic therapy where I would buy two or three bottles of different brands and take those on tour. When you’re basically not sleeping, eating God knows what, and completely off rhythm and just by taking maybe like eight probiotic pills a night from a combination of different brands, it solved all my problems.

I can travel anywhere in the world and as long as I’m overdosing on probiotics, mixing up different brands; no issues whatsoever. It’s the mix of the different brands is I think what solves.

Tim Ferriss: It’s key, right.

Soman Chainani: The other thing that helps to sleep, just in terms of insomnia, if you have an aroma therapy diffuser, one of those wood diffusers you can get on Amazon for about $20.00, and you use lavender oil in it, it will zonk you out very, very fast.

Tim Ferriss: Lavender oil, alright. I’ll have to play around with this. I started using a diffuser for the first time after I had Nicholas McCarthy on the podcast, who is a one-handed concert pianist.

Soman Chainani: Oh, my God.

Tim Ferriss: He uses geranium oil when he’s composing. He says it’s the perfect mixture of relaxation without sleepiness; it’s relaxation plus alertness for him. So I use geranium oil for a lot of my editing and writing sessions when I did Tools of Titans . Do you use the diffuser for anything other than lavender oil?

Soman Chainani: I do. This is such a stupid answer but at the food market I go to, they have this basket of 50 percent off of oils of whatever hasn’t sold that week. So I just buy whatever’s in there. So I never really keep track of what’s in the diffuser on any day; it’s just a different smell. Welcome to my life. But I’m willing to seek control over what oil is in the diffuser.

Tim Ferriss: When you’re traveling as much as it sounds like you do, 60 to 80 days a year, and I’m sure you have other non-tour related travel, do you have any tips for minimizing onset of cold, flu, etc.; things like that?

Soman Chainani: The steam thing before I leave helps a lot because it really does clear your sinuses. Because that’s where you can get sinus infections, and I think I was prone to those a lot. And it’s funny. I read a book about Steven Spielberg, who apparently does the same thing when he’s shooting a movie for him not to get sick. Which is he drinks tea incessantly, and herbal tea to stay warm.

Because you never know what the weather is, you never know what the situation is going to be but he’s always downing hot tea of some herbal variety. When I’m tour, everywhere I go, every time I get in the car I get a hot tea. Every time I get to a school, I drink a hot tea. So I’m drinking like seven or eight cups a day.

Tim Ferriss: Do you have a go-to hot tea or is it like the 50 percent off?

Soman Chainani: If I can get to a Starbucks, they’ve got the mint majesty which is really good. We should preface this all by saying I can’t drink caffeine because it makes me crazy.

Tim Ferriss: Do you drink alcohol, or no?

Soman Chainani: No. The glass of wine if it’s been a particularly horrific day but otherwise, not really.

Tim Ferriss: You don’t need the enhancement or handicap, one way or the other?

Soman Chainani: This is what I would say, and this is sad but I think there’s a happy lining to it. which is that I spent so long in my 20s and teens trying to get control of my brain and trying to make it a happy place; do you know what I mean?

Tim Ferriss: Sure.

Soman Chainani: When I finally found peace of mind and the creative space to work in, and now live in a fairly, I don’t know, just like constant state of goodness, I don’t want to mess it up.

Tim Ferriss: I get it; totally get it.

Soman Chainani: I think that’s where I am at the moment.

Tim Ferriss: What topic would you speak about if you had to give a TED Talk on something that you’re not known for at all? So it can’t be tutoring, can’t be tennis. It certainly can’t be the writing that you’re doing.

Soman Chainani: It might be on things that make people laugh. Because I’ve done all these studies. When you’re writing, you want to get to the sense of what makes kids laugh. As horrific as the School for Good and Evil books are at times, they’re quite dark; they’re also quite funny. And a lot of it is trying to find to what makes kids laugh. So I would do a TED Talk, I would hope; I read this study about these people who spent ten years trying to figure out what makes people of all cultures laugh no matter what.

Even if you go to the recesses of the Amazon, it will make people laugh. They came up with four things. And the four things were – I’m going to try not to die laughing while I say these. No. 1 is beating someone with a kitchen utensil.

Tim Ferriss: Got it; good to know.

Soman Chainani: No. 2 is falling down a short flight of stairs, which apparently no matter where you are, it makes people laugh. No. 3 is a swift fart delivered in silence.

Tim Ferriss: I was going to say fart has to be in there somewhere. I like how specific; a swift fart delivered in silence.

Soman Chainani: They’re so specific.

Tim Ferriss: That could also be the name of my memoir.

Soman Chainani: I use that. I use that in chapter 3 of the first book and it’s always mentioned as one of the kids’ favorite moments. And I’m like of course, it’s one of the four things. No. 4 was such a shock, and then it stayed with me. Is adults dressed as twins.

Tim Ferriss: What?

Soman Chainani: Adults dressed as twins. If you parade two adults dressed in the same clothes in front of a weird tribe in the Amazon, everyone will laugh.

Tim Ferriss: Alright, that would make a good TED Talk.

Soman Chainani: So things like that; like what connects everybody. What are the common denominators; I just think those are important. So I’m trying to get to the bottom of those. Because that’s what fairy tales are, also. At the end of the day, School for Good and Evil at the core are fairy tales so I’m trying to get to the essentialness, and maybe this is why I’m so focused on Zen and meditation and trying to understand the world beyond the matrix; of trying to get to the bottom of what connects every kid, what connects every one of us before our blank slates are filled.

Tim Ferriss: Definitely. What is the bad advice that you hear given out often in your world?

And I’m deliberately keeping that very, very broad. I’m not going to define your world for you; you can take it any way you want.

Soman Chainani: This whole idea of following your passion, following what you think you were meant to do, or following what you love; I don’t always know is going to lead you somewhere productive. Because I think ultimately what you were meant to do isn’t necessarily what you love; it’s what you’re good at. It’s what you’re divinely meant to do; what you’re good at.

I always think that’s the better question; what are you better at than anyone else in the whole world? What would you put yourself against anyone else in the whole world? I think that’s what’s going to lead you somewhere really good. Because what, everybody wants to be a professional athlete or movie star at some level.

So I don’t know following what you love or your passion is necessarily going to guide you to the most fulfilling career.

Tim Ferriss: I think it’s also easier in the sense that there are more options for taking something you are good at and molding it into something you can be excited about, or combining it with other things you are excited about. Then, starting with an undirected passion and then trying to become good at wherever that leads you.

Soman Chainani: Oh, you’re right. You’re 100 percent right. Because if you’re just following the passion, you don’t have whatever it is, the 10,000 hours that is behind mastery to even begin to get going.

Tim Ferriss: If you could have one gigantic billboard anywhere with anything on it, a short message, no advertising; what would you put on it, a message to get out to the world?

Soman Chainani: I think one of two things. One is if I’m in New York, it would be “death is coming.” One of the things I meditate on a lot is just what it would feel like to die. Oh, besides looking for the me, some days I just try to imagine what it would feel like for everything to just disappear; for the something of consciousness to become nothing. So actually trying to experience death. I think that has led me more towards happiness than anything else in my life. Trying to understand that your life is short and it’s going to end, and it can end at any minute so take advantage. Really try to make of your life everything you can. So that’s the one thing.

The second one is when I’m in Miami, because my parents have a beach house on this island, and it’s so clear above that you can see the night sky with the stars. And so if I was anywhere else but New York, I would just say look at the stars because you can’t see stars in New York.

Because every time you look up there, you realize the fact that there’s life on earth is such a weird, freak accident that should never have happened. And there is no meaning to life, necessarily, in the larger, cosmic scheme of things. It’s just a fluke; it’s an accident. So enjoy it because the fact that you got to have a life in the first place, compared to the infinity of the universe is pretty remarkable.

Tim Ferriss: I like that. It surprisingly echoes the thoughts of two very disparate people I’ve had on the podcast also, BJ Miller who is a palliative care physician; helps people to die in hospice care. And Ed Cook, who is a memory champion and entrepreneur from the UK. Both talk about the stars in a similar way.

I think that is a profound place to start to wrap up. Just a few more questions and I’ll certainly ask at the very end where people can find you and so on. But do you have any ask or request or suggestion for the audience? Any parting words, recommendations, suggestions, please?

Soman Chainani: I would just say if these are the principles that you’re interested in, not just for yourself but for kids, either your own or somebody else’s; this book series will lead those kids in the right direction. Because it forces them to question all their assumptions about what good and evil are, about what they usually see in the world, and about what their life is going to look like. It’s about empowering kids when kids usually don’t feel empowered, and usually feel so helpless.

So it lets them reinterpret what heroes really are. So I would just say give it to a kid and see what their reaction is.

Tim Ferriss: Soman, thank you so much for the time. This has been a blast. It would be great to grab some Mid Majesty tea when I’m next in New York or you’re next in San Francisco. Where can people find you online, learn more about you, say hello on social if that’s one of the places to find you? Where should they find you?

Soman Chainani: Besides Tinder?

Tim Ferriss: Besides Tinder. If only there were a search function; alas.

Soman Chainani: I think Twitter, I tend to post pretty regularly; Instagram as well. We have our YouTube channel which is called Ever Never TV but that’s mainly for the kids. So Twitter and Instagram for the adults; Ever Never TV for the kids, and also the School for Good and Evil website is a treasure trove for any kid under the age of 16, even if they haven’t read the books.

It’s just a great place to spend some time because there are so many awesome interactive features on there.

Tim Ferriss: And Twitter, it’s @somanchainani, am I getting that right?

Soman Chainani: Chainani, yes. Somanchainani on Twitter, and then Instagram is somanc.

Tim Ferriss: Got it; S-O-M-A-N-C. Soman, thank you so much for taking the time; I’ve really enjoyed this conversation. And to everybody listening, you can find links to everything; the School for Good and Evil of course, everything else, all the books we mentioned, all the docs we mentioned, in the show notes which can be found with the show notes for every other episode at fourhourworkweek.com/podcast, all spelled out. Fourhourworkweek.com/podcast. As always, and until next time, thank you for listening.

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  1. The School for Good and Evil Series by Soman Chainani

    Book 1. The School for Good and Evil. by Soman Chainani. 3.99 · 119009 Ratings · 12881 Reviews · published 2013 · 86 editions. The first kidnappings happened two hundred years b…. Want to Read.

  2. Books by Soman Chainani (Author of The School for Good and Evil)

    Soman Chainani has 77 books on Goodreads with 773009 ratings. Soman Chainani's most popular book is The School for Good and Evil (The School for Good and...

  3. Soman Chainani

    Description / Buy at Amazon. Soman Chainani is a reputed American novelist and filmmaker, who is well known for writing children's books and fantasy novels. He is particularly famous for his book series called The School for Good and Evil. This series' first book with the same name made its debut on the bestselling list of the New York Times.

  4. Soman Chainani (Author of The School for Good and Evil)

    He has been nominated for the Waterstone P. Soman Chainani's debut series, THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD AND EVIL, has sold more than 3.5 million copies, been translated into 31 languages across 6 continents, and will be a major motion picture from Netflix in 2022. Each of the six books in the series — THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD AND EVIL, A WORLD WITHOUT ...

  5. Soman Chainani

    Soman Chainani is an American author and filmmaker, best known for writing the children's book series The School for Good and Evil. Early ... Together, Chainani's books have been on the New York Times Bestseller List for 50 weeks. His book, Rise of the School for Good and Evil was released on May 31, ...

  6. The School for Good and Evil: The Collector's Edition (School for Good

    Soman Chainani's debut series, THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD & EVIL, has sold more than 3.5 million copies, been translated into 32 languages across six continents, and has been adapted into a major motion picture from Netflix that debuted at #1 in over 80 countries at release. ... Fairy tales as a whole are subversive, and Soman Chainani delves into ...

  7. TeachingBooks

    Book Tour Insights with Soman Chainani about A World Without Princes. Created by HarperKids Watch the Video Share. ... Browse books by Soman Chainani Flying Lessons & Other Stories. by Ellen Oh, Kelly J. Baptist, Soman Chainani, and Meg Medina. 45 Resources7 Awards. Add to Reading List Share this Book.

  8. The School for Good and Evil: The Complete 6-Book Collection

    All six books in Soman Chainani's New York Times bestselling fantasy series, The School for Good and Evil, are joined together in this digital collection! Journey into the dazzling world of the School for Good and Evil, where ordinary boys and girls are trained to be fairy-tale heroes and villains. Sophie and Agatha each think they know where ...

  9. Book Tour

    Yesterday I went to Wesleyan RJ Julia Bookstore to attend a book signing for an author of one of my favorite series. Soman Chainani is the genius behind The School for Good and Evil series which was technically written for the middle-grade age group, but does have a more YA feel to it.. The event was held to promote the release of his newest book, The Rise of the School of Good and Evil, which ...

  10. List of Books by Soman Chainani

    QUICK ADD. The School for Good and Evil: The Complete 6-Book Collection. by Soman Chainani. QUICK ADD. The School for Good and Evil Books 1-4 Paperback Box Set: Now a Netflix Originals Movie. by Soman Chainani. QUICK ADD. Fall of the School for Good and Evil (Signed Book) by Soman Chainani.

  11. The Ever Never Handbook

    Soman Chainani's New York Times bestselling series (The School for Good and Evil, A World Without Princes, and The Last Ever After) comes to life in this handbook full of everything students need to learn in order to survive their own fairy tale—from dress codes and school rules to alumni portraits, kingdom maps, and much, much more.

  12. The School for Good and Evil by Soman Chainani

    Soman Chainani's debut series, THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD AND EVIL, has sold more than 3.5 million copies, been translated into 31 languages across 6 continents, and will be a major motion picture from Netflix in 2022. ... Soman's latest book, BEASTS & BEAUTY, is an instant New York Times Bestseller and will soon be published in 10 languages. It ...

  13. Soman Chainani Interview: Beasts and Beauty

    Published Sep 19, 2021. The School for Good and Evil author Soman Chainani talks about the Netflix adaptation of the series and his new fairytale book, Beasts and Beauty. Soman Chainani continues telling stories of good and evil and happily ever afters in his new book Beasts and Beaty. The collection takes twelve classic fairytales and gives ...

  14. Beasts and Beauty: Dangerous Tales by Soman Chainani || Gloriously

    Posted September 25, 2021 by Sammie in blog tour, book review, diversity, fantasy, five stars, LGBT, retelling, short stories, young adult / 3 Comments. Beasts and Beauty: Dangerous Tales by Soman Chainani, Julia Iredale ... Soman Chainani's first novel, THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD AND EVIL, debuted on the New York Times Bestseller List, has been ...

  15. The School for Good and Evil by Soman Chainani

    The School for Good and Evil will soon be a major motion picture from Netflix, starring Academy Award winner Charlize Theron, Kerry Washington, Laurence Fishburne, Michelle Yeoh, Cate Blanchett, and many more!. Every four years, two girls are kidnapped from the village of Gavaldon. Legend has it these lost children are sent to the School for Good and Evil, the fabled institution where they ...

  16. Soman Chainani Books

    Soman Chainani. £16.99. Hardback. Beasts and Beauty. Soman Chainani. £14.99. Paperback. Soman Chainani is an American film director and the Waterstones Children's Book Prize nominated author of the bestselling The School of Good and Evil series.

  17. Entering the School for Good & Evil: An Interview with Soman Chainani

    I'm Soman Chainani, the author of THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD & EVIL series and the writer of the upcoming film adaptations for Universal as well. I'm thrilled to be here at Teen Librarian to give you a little peek behind the scenes of the SGE world. I'm also a massive, massive Anglophile and worked in the British film and TV industry for years ...

  18. Soman Chainani Books

    Beasts and Beauty. Soman Chainani. $ 4.99 - $ 15.75. The School For Good and Evil: The Ever Never Handbook. Soman Chainani. $ 5.19 - $ 15.16. The School for Good and Evil: The Complete Series: The School for Good and Evil, the School for Good and Evil: A World Without Princes, the School for Good and Evil: The Last Ever After, the School fo.

  19. The School for Good and Evil Series 5-Book Set

    Soman Chainani 76 books 7,207 followers. Soman Chainani's debut series, THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD AND EVIL, has sold more than 3.5 million copies, been translated into 31 languages across 6 continents, and will be a major motion picture from Netflix in 2022.

  20. Soman Chainani

    Soman Chainani ( @SomanChainani) is a detailed planner, filmmaker, and New York Times best selling author. Soman's debut fiction series, The School for Good and Evil, has sold more than a million copies, has been translated into more than twenty languages across six continents, and will soon be a film from Universal Pictures.

  21. The Tim Ferriss Show Transcripts: Life Lessons from Taylor Swift

    Please enjoy this transcript of my interview with Soman Chainani (), the bestselling author of The School for Good & Evil book series, which has sold more than 4 million copies, been translated into 35 languages across six continents, and been adapted into a major motion picture from Netflix that debuted at #1 in more than 80 countries.. Soman's book of retold fairy tales, Beasts and Beauty ...

  22. Fall of the School for Good and Evil by Soman Chainani

    May 2, 2023. Fall of the School for Good and Evil is the conclusion for the Rise duology, that sets up Chainani's popular series, The School for Good and Evil. We pick up where Rise of the School for Good and Evil left off, with a fractured school and brothers at war. This book was much more streamlined and easier to follow than the first one.

  23. The Tim Ferriss Show Transcripts: Soman Chainani (#220)

    Please enjoy this transcript of my interview with Soman Chainani, a detailed planner, filmmaker, and New York Times best selling author. Transcripts may contain a few typos—with some episodes lasting 2+ hours, it's difficult to catch some minor errors. Enjoy! Listen to the interview here or by selecting any of the options below. DUE TO … Continue reading "The Tim Ferriss Show Transcripts ...