Sarat chandra Chattopadhyay
- Poli en
- Nov 4, 2019
- 2 min read

Saratchandra Chattopadhyay ( শরৎচন্দ্র চট্টোপাধ্যায় )was conceived on September 15, 1876 at Devanandapur in the Hooghly region of West Bengal. His dad was Motilal Chattopadhyay and mother was Bhubanmohini. Saratchandra burned through the greater part of his adolescence with his mom at her family's home in Bhagalpur, Bihar, from where he passed the University Entrance assessment. Despite the fact that he likewise went to school for around two years, he couldn't finish the examinations. At 27 years old he went to Burma and got a new line of work as a representative in an administration office at Rangoon. He left Rangoon in 1916 and settled, first at Baje Shibpur, Howrah, close to Kolkata. And afterward, around ten years after the fact, he moved to his own home in Samtabed, a town on the banks of the Rupnarayan. Some time before his demise he had constructed another house in Kolkata. He passed on in Kolkata on January 16, 1938.
His first short story was distributed in 1903 under his uncle's name Surendranath Ganguli. Baradidi, a novella, rather a long short-story, was distributed in 1907, presently under his very own name, in Bharati. While in Burma, he kept overhauling the drafts of a considerable lot of his compositions that he had first written down at Bhagalpur, simultaneously he took a shot at making new fiction. To be sure, the absolute most charming characters he made, to be specific "Indranath" of Srikanta (1917), or "Lalu" of Chhelebelar Galpa (distributed as a book three months after his demise in 1938) depended on his companion Rajendranath Majumdar or Raju of Bhagalpur. Since 1913, and especially after 1916, Saratchandra's distinction has been solidly settled. He has been en incredibly well known creator from that point onward. Among his books are Devdas (written in 1901 however distributed in 1917), Parineeta (1914), Biraj Bou (1914), Palli-Samaj (1916), Srikanta (in four sections; 1917, 1918, 1927, 1933), Charitraheen (1917), Grihadaha (1919), Pather-Dabi (1926), Shesh Prashno (1931), Bipradas (1935). Saratchandra's works have been over and again converted into numerous Indian dialects. A significant number of these have additionally been effectively sensationalized in front of an audience and adjusted to films.
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