![]() He began to write of them as investigating in an Indian metropolis-the capital of British India until 1911-that has had been thoroughly Indianised. It was almost as a postcolonial response that Sharadindu Bandyopadhyay introduced the Bengali "Bhadrolok" (gentleman) sleuth Byomkesh Bakshi and Ajit Bandyopadhyay (Byomkesh's associate and narrator) in Pather Kanta in 1932. ![]() 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. He was, however, concerned with how the Indian and Bengali fictional detectives created between 18 had failed to exist as something other than mere copies of the Western (and particularly English) fictional detectives. Auguste Dupin produced by Edgar Allan Poe. Overview The advocate-turned-littérateur Bandyopadhyay was deeply influenced by Sherlock Holmes of Arthur Conan Doyle, Hercule Poirot of Agatha Christie and Father Brown of G.K.Chesterton as well as the "tales of ratiocination" involving C. Bandyopadhyay once said that these stories can be thought as and read as social novels only. He is one of the most successful detective characters in Bengali literature. ![]() ![]() Byomkesh Bakshi Byomkesh Bakshi (or Byomkesh Baksi) (Bengali: ব্যোমকেশ বক্সী) is a fictional detective in Bengali literature created by Sharadindu Bandyopadhyay.
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