Byomkesh Bakshi

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Cover of a  Byomkesh Bakshi stories collection , English translation. Still from the TV version with Rajit Kapur (in the foreground) as Bakshi.
Cover of a Byomkesh Bakshi stories collection , English translation. Still from the TV version with Rajit Kapur (in the foreground) as Bakshi.

Byomkesh Bakshi is a fictional detective in Bengali literature created by Sharadindu Bandyopadhyay. The advocate-turned-litterateur Bandyopadhyay was deeply influenced by the different Sherlock Holmes, Hercule Poirot and Father Brown stories as well as the "tales of ratiocination" produced by Edgar Allan Poe. He was, however, concerned with how the Indian and Bengali fictional detectives created between 1890 and 1930 had failed to exist as something other than mere copies of the Western (and particulalry English) fictional detectives. All the stories of Dinendra Kumar Ray's Robert Blake, Panchkari Dey's Debendra Bijoy Mitra or Swapan Kumar's Deepak Chatterjee were almost always set in London or in Kolkata which was identifiably the British metropolis. It was almost as a postcolonial response that Sharadindu Bandyopadhyay introduced the Bengali 'bhadrolok' (gentleman) sleuth Byomkesh Bakshi and Ajit Banerjee (Byomkesh's associate and narrator) in "Pather Kanta" in 1932, and began to write of them as investigating in an Indian metropolis - the capital of British India until 1911 - that has had been thoroughly Indianised. Initially serialized in the literary magazine Basumati, the stories and novels were all eventually published in hardcover editions, the first being Byomkesher Diary.

The detective was picturized in a film (Chiriyakhana or The Zoo) by Satyajit Ray, starring Uttam Kumar in 1967. It has also been televised in Hindi by Doordarshan by Basu Chatterjee, featuring Rajit Kapur.

Contents

[edit] Major characters and events

Byomkesh meets his lifelong friend, Ajit in Satyanveshi(Satya-Truth and anveshi - investigator), where he introduces himself as a "truth seeker" under the alias Atulchandra Mitra. Later, Byomkesh and Ajit share a flat on Harrison Road. Ajit's ambition from the start is to be a writer and he becomes moderately successful by narrating their cases. He buys a car in the later years of World War II. Byomkesh and Ajit get many of their leads from their favorite newspaper, Dainik Kalketu. Byomkesh marries Satyaboti, someone he meets while investigating the murder of Karalicharan Basu. Later, they buy a house. Puntiram is their faithful servant through most of the novels. The sympathetic police officer, Purandar Pandey, who helps out in many cases first makes his appearance in Chitrochor. During the Durgo-rahasyo case, Byomkesh's son is born. In many of the novels written after the war, Sharadindu changes from a first-person narrative to a more impersonal third-person format.

[edit] Literature Featuring Byomkesh Bakshi

[edit] Anthologized in Sharadindu Omnibus Volume I

  1. Satyanneshi: Byomkesh makes his first appearance and meets lifelong friend and narrator, Ajit.
  2. Pother kanta (also transliterated as Pather kanta). This is a short novel featuring an innovative serial killer.
  3. Seemanto-heera (can also be transliterated as Sheemanto heera, Seemanta heera or Shimantohira). A story featuring the theft of a diamond.
  4. Makorshar rosh 'A story about a man consuming "Tarantulla" venom of spider as intoxication.
  5. Arthamonorthom
  6. Chorabali
  7. Agnibaan' 'This story is about a scientist who invented match sticks to kill his wife to claim the insurance money but eventually his only son and daughter died.
  8. Upasonghaar
  9. Roktomukhi neela
  10. Byomkesh o Boroda
  11. Chitrochor' 'A Story about a man who stole a group photograph to conceal his identity.
  12. Durgo-rahasyo
  13. Chiriyakhana

[edit] Anthologized in Sharadindu Omnibus Volume II

  1. Adim ripu
  2. Banhi-patanga
  3. Rokter daag
  4. Monimondon
  5. Amriter mrityu
  6. Shaila Rahasya
  7. Ochin pakhi
  8. Kohen kobi Kalidas'
  9. Adrishyo trikon
  10. Khunji khunji nari
  11. Adwitio
  12. Mognomoinak
  13. Dushtochokro
  14. Hneyalir chhondo
  15. Room no. 2
  16. Chholonar chhondo
  17. Shojarur kanta
  18. Benishonghar
  19. Lohar biscuit
  20. Bishupal bodh. Incomplete

Penguin Books (India) have started publishing English translations (translated by Sreejata Guha currently living at Pittsburgh, USA) of Byomkesh novellas. The first book released in 1999 titled Picture Imperfect has the following stories: 1. The Inquisitor (Satyanveshi) 2. The Gramophone Pin Mystery (Pather Kanta) 3. The Venom of the Tarantula (Makarshar Rosh) 4. Where there's a Will (Arthamanartham) 5. Calamity Strikes (Ognibaan) 6. An Encore for Byomkesh (Upasanhar) 7. Picture Imperfect (Chitrachor)

[edit] Trivia

Harrison Street and Strand Road intersection c. 1945. Byomkesh and Ajit spent most of the years in an apartment not far from here.
Harrison Street and Strand Road intersection c. 1945. Byomkesh and Ajit spent most of the years in an apartment not far from here.
  • The customs and manners of Calcutta during the British Raj are very well portrayed in the earlier books, from street names to the names of the shops. Interestingly, the bridge spanning the Hooghly river, was a pontoon bridge as mentioned by Byomkesh twice in Pother kanta. This was prior to the current Howrah Bridge, construction of which began three years after the publication of the first edition of the novel.
  • In the foreword to the first anthologized edition of stories featuring Byomkesh, Byomkesher diary, published by Gurudas Chottopadhyay and Sons, which contained Pother kanta, Satyanneshi, Seemanto-heera and Makorshar rosh, Sharadindu Bandyopadhyay wrote, "Many will be anxious to know whether these are original stories or merely transcreated from foreign novels. For the interest of the general reader, I'd like to make it known that these are completely my own creations"
  • Although Pother kanta was the first novel featuring Byomkesh that Sharadindu wrote, since Satyanneshi is the novel in which the character of Byomkesh Bakshi is established, it is considered by readers to be the first in the series.
  • Byomkesh learned to play chess from Ajit.
  • Byomkesh's father was a mathematics teacher by profession.
  • Byomkesh reads the personal advertisements in a newspaper as if they were the real news. In stories like Pather Kanta, cases are partially introduced through the personal advertisement section of the newspaper.
  • Although most stories are penned by Ajit, somewhere through the second book of Byomkesh stories, he gives up writing Byomkesh's accounts.
  • Satyajit Ray named his first Professor Shonku story Byomjatrir Diary - a play on the title of the first Byomkesh novel.

[edit] External links