| Script :
Debrani Mitra
Illustrator :Souren
Roy
ISBN : 81-7508-165-1
Vol. No : 659
The great Bengali novelist
Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyaya, was born in 1838, in Kantalpara, Bengal.
He obtained a post as Deputy Collector and continued in Government service
for 32 years, but he was often harassed because his pride in his country
and people angered his British superiors. The song ‘Vande Mataram’ which
Bankim Chandra first wrote in his novel, ‘Ananda Math’, echoed though the
freedom movement; and during the non-co-operation movement the song was
heard on the lips of many, while they braved the lathis of the British
police force. Before Bankim Chandra, writers in India had depended upon
Sanskrit literature for plots. Bankim Chandra was amongst the first to
realise that history could be a rich source of material. His historical
fiction became popular at once and earned him the title ‘Sir Walter Scott
of India’. His novels though originally written in Bengali have been translated
into many Indian languages Devi Choudhurani and her mentor, Bhavani Pathak,
are historical characters that figure in the report of Lieutenant Brennan,
quoted by Hunter in his ‘Statistical Account of Bengal’. There is no historical
explanation of what made Devi turn to dacoity in the first place and later,
what made her give it up. However, Bankim Chandra’s fertile imagination
has provided the answers to these puzzling questions in his novel ‘Devi
Choudhurani’, on which our tale is based.
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