
Beyond Devdas and Srikant: 5 Bengali books where women take lead
Bengali literature is full of women whose stories are just as powerful. These books speak of women's inner desire, their loneliness and their resistance. Their lives may have played out within the constraints of home and custom, but their hearts reached far beyond. Here are five Bengali books where women take the lead.
The Broken Nest (Nastanirh)
Charulata has everything a woman is supposed to need- comfort and a respectable marriage. Yet she feels unseen. Her husband Bhupati is too busy with his political newspaper to notice her. Into Charu's loneliness walks Amal, Bhupati's cousin, full of love for literature and poetry. As they share poetry and long conversations, a tender bond blooms between them. Rabindranath Tagore perfectly shows the emotional hunger of a woman whose world opens just as it begins to fall apart. It's a story of intimacy without touch and love without name. Charu's emotional longing and Bhupati's obliviousness make this book a devastating and memorable read. Satyajit Ray's iconic film Charulata is based on The Broken Nest.
A young girl, Satyabati, married at the tender age of eight. She is tormented by her mother-in-law, but refuses to accept the life forced upon her. In a deeply patriarchal society, she fights against her marital family's norms and defines a new way for women. This feminist novel is one of the earliest pieces of Bengali literature and a truly powerful one. Satyabati fights for her daughter so that she doesn't have to bear the same fate as her, and get married as a child. The First Promise is a book about women's fight against social prejudices and family control in a patriarchal society.
This is the story of an orphaned girl, Lalita, who grows up in her uncle's home. She is secretly in love with her neighbour Shekhar. Their fragile bond, tested constantly by class divides and wounded pride. Beneath its soft romantic surface, Parineeta is a protest against power and patriarchy. Lalita holds the novel together, making her one of Sarat Chandra's most unforgettable characters. This book has been adapted to the screen many times. Most memorable is the 2005 film, Parineeta, starring Vidya Balan.
When Maitreyi Devi was a teenager, she had a secret romance with Romanian writer Mircea Eliade. Years later, she discovered that he had turned their relationship into a novel, La Nuit Bengali. It was without her knowledge and he had also added fictional elements. Decades later, she published her rebuttal, It Does Not Die. In this memoir, she tells her side of the story, the one she did not get to tell. It's about love, heartbreak and the pain of being written about without consent. Eliade's book was made into a film The Bengali Night, starring Hugh Grant and Supriya Pathak. It completely ignored Devi's rebuttal. Her book remains a firm act of reclaiming the narrative proof that the story doesn't end until she tells it. Her side of the story is also said to have loosely inspired Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam.
After her husband's early death, Bandana refuses to become the traditional image of a grieving widow. As society turns hostile and even her closest ties begin to break, she chooses a new path. She leaves behind everything familiar to find meaning in helping others. Graceful and rebellious, Bandana reclaims her life on her own terms. This is the story of a woman who loses everything, but finds herself. Adapted into a Bengali Film Shet Patharer Thala, starring Aparna Sen.
(The writer is an intern with indianexpress.com)

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Indian Express
7 hours ago
- Indian Express
Beyond Devdas and Srikant: 5 Bengali books where women take lead
Devdas, the tragic hero who drank himself into legend, and Srikanta, the wandering romantic. These men have long stood at the centre of Bengali literature. But what about the women? The ones who loved, longed, rebelled? Bengali literature is full of women whose stories are just as powerful. These books speak of women's inner desire, their loneliness and their resistance. Their lives may have played out within the constraints of home and custom, but their hearts reached far beyond. Here are five Bengali books where women take the lead. The Broken Nest (Nastanirh) Charulata has everything a woman is supposed to need- comfort and a respectable marriage. Yet she feels unseen. Her husband Bhupati is too busy with his political newspaper to notice her. Into Charu's loneliness walks Amal, Bhupati's cousin, full of love for literature and poetry. As they share poetry and long conversations, a tender bond blooms between them. Rabindranath Tagore perfectly shows the emotional hunger of a woman whose world opens just as it begins to fall apart. It's a story of intimacy without touch and love without name. Charu's emotional longing and Bhupati's obliviousness make this book a devastating and memorable read. Satyajit Ray's iconic film Charulata is based on The Broken Nest. A young girl, Satyabati, married at the tender age of eight. She is tormented by her mother-in-law, but refuses to accept the life forced upon her. In a deeply patriarchal society, she fights against her marital family's norms and defines a new way for women. This feminist novel is one of the earliest pieces of Bengali literature and a truly powerful one. Satyabati fights for her daughter so that she doesn't have to bear the same fate as her, and get married as a child. The First Promise is a book about women's fight against social prejudices and family control in a patriarchal society. This is the story of an orphaned girl, Lalita, who grows up in her uncle's home. She is secretly in love with her neighbour Shekhar. Their fragile bond, tested constantly by class divides and wounded pride. Beneath its soft romantic surface, Parineeta is a protest against power and patriarchy. Lalita holds the novel together, making her one of Sarat Chandra's most unforgettable characters. This book has been adapted to the screen many times. Most memorable is the 2005 film, Parineeta, starring Vidya Balan. When Maitreyi Devi was a teenager, she had a secret romance with Romanian writer Mircea Eliade. Years later, she discovered that he had turned their relationship into a novel, La Nuit Bengali. It was without her knowledge and he had also added fictional elements. Decades later, she published her rebuttal, It Does Not Die. In this memoir, she tells her side of the story, the one she did not get to tell. It's about love, heartbreak and the pain of being written about without consent. Eliade's book was made into a film The Bengali Night, starring Hugh Grant and Supriya Pathak. It completely ignored Devi's rebuttal. Her book remains a firm act of reclaiming the narrative proof that the story doesn't end until she tells it. Her side of the story is also said to have loosely inspired Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam. After her husband's early death, Bandana refuses to become the traditional image of a grieving widow. As society turns hostile and even her closest ties begin to break, she chooses a new path. She leaves behind everything familiar to find meaning in helping others. Graceful and rebellious, Bandana reclaims her life on her own terms. This is the story of a woman who loses everything, but finds herself. Adapted into a Bengali Film Shet Patharer Thala, starring Aparna Sen. (The writer is an intern with


Mint
8 hours ago
- Mint
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So you will find the torkari in North Kolkata (the older part of the city) to be slightly sweeter," says Dasgupta Sensarma. At Geetika on Sukia Street and Nandy Sweets ( ₹14 for 2 hing kochuris), Goabagan Road, both located in the Manicktala area and run by Bengalis, the torkari is made of potatoes with the skin on, and has hints of ginger, and the unmistaken sweetness that comes from the addition of sugar. In Howrah, the city on the western bank of the Hooghly, too, the love for kochuri is the same. On Dobson Road, two kochuri shops, both run by Marwaris—Lali Chhangani and Vaishno Sweets & Snacks ( ₹36 for)—are jam-packed with people queuing up to get their Sunday breakfast. Both make club kochuri that are puffed up and crispy, with a filling of urad dal. At Lali Chhangani, a branch of the 50-year-old shop located in Bara Bazar, it is served in a large conical bowl made of dried leaves. The torkari here is spicy compared to the shops run by the Bengalis and those from Uttar Pradesh; a layer of red chilli oil on top is an indication. At Vaishno Sweets, it also includes paneer and chole, with a generous topping of sev. The Marwaris migrated to Kolkata in the 19th century as traders and merchants, and brought with them their unique food traditions. At Sharma Sweets and Snacks ( ₹12 per kochuri) in Lake Market, South Kolkata, I found the torkari closer to the one made in Lucknow—flavoured with coriander seeds and fennel. The city is dotted with kochuri shops named Sharma Sweets run by migrants from Uttar Pradesh. 'There's a Bihari version too, which has garlic. One can find it in the Bara Bazar area, or Howrah where there are more Bihari migrants," adds Dasgupta Sensarma. I am a Lucknow kachori fiend, and yet I find Kolkata's kochuri culture unique, with each migrant community bringing its own flavour, and tying it neatly to the city's inherent love for deep-fried breads. Shirin Mehrotra is a Delhi-based food writer and researcher


NDTV
11 hours ago
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