Bhoy Samagra (The Complete Frights) brings together Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay’s ghost and supernatural stories. Bibhutibhushan is best known for the realism of Pather Panchali and Aparajito, but he had a deep, lifelong interest in the unseen — in the folk beliefs of rural Bengal, in apparitions reported by farmers and travellers, in the thin places of the world.
The stories collected here vary in mood. Some are short, conversational anecdotes — the kind of thing one neighbour might tell another after dinner. Others are longer pieces with the slow build of true horror. Throughout, Bibhutibhushan keeps his characteristic voice: unhurried, observant, more interested in atmosphere than in shock.
If the Taranath Tantrik stories are his most famous occult writing, Bhoy Samagra is the larger and more varied counterpart. It is one of the strongest collections of supernatural fiction in any Indian language, and a useful complement to his realist work.