Today, the landscape is changing. Print runs are shrinking. E-books and audiobooks are creeping in. Yet, the Boi Mela (Book Fair) season still sees pandemonium. The physical book, in Bengal, remains a ritual. The history of the Bengali book is not a dry list of dates and authors. It is the story of how a language survived centuries of Persian influence, British rule, partition, war, and globalization.
This was the era of the Mangal Kavyas —narrative poems glorifying local deities like Manasa (the snake goddess) or Chandi. These were not "books" in the modern sense, but sacred objects. Villagers would gather to listen to a Puthi recital, a tradition known as Puthi-path . The most famous among these is perhaps Sri Krishna Vijaya by Maladhar Basu. The real revolution began with a Danish missionary, William Carey. Arriving in Serampore (just north of Calcutta), Carey realized that to spread the Gospel, he needed to master the local tongue. Between 1800 and 1815, the Serampore Mission Press did the unthinkable: they mechanized the printing of Bengali. history bengali book
While the elite were reading English literature, the common man in Battala was devouring Panchali (narrative songs), Kissa (romances), and even Bhoot o Pret (ghost stories). The most curious genre was the Naksha —satirical maps and books mocking the British Raj. The Battala publishers were shrewd. They used woodcut illustrations, lurid covers, and a phonetic style of writing that mirrored how people actually spoke. The printing press democratized reading, and by the late 1800s, the Bengali novel was born. Today, the landscape is changing