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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Subodh_GhoshSubodh Ghosh - Wikipedia

    Subodh Ghosh (14 September 1909 – 10 March 1980) was a noted Indian author of Bengali literature and a journalist with the Kolkata-based daily newspaper Ananda Bazar Patrika. Born at Hazaribagh on 14 September 1909, now in Jharkhand , he studied in St. Columba's College as well as privately with scholar Mahesh Chandra Ghosh .

  2. Subodh Ghosh was born on 14 September 1909, in Hazaribagh now in Jharkhand. He was a noted Indian author of Bengali literature and a journalist with the Kolkata-based daily newspaper Ananda Bazar Patrika. He studied at St. Columba’s College as well as privately with scholar Mahesh Chandra Ghosh.

  3. Subodh Ghosh has 37 books on Goodreads with 3089 ratings. Subodh Ghosh’s most popular book is শুন বরনারী.

  4. Apr 3, 2016 · Subodh Ghosh Biography. Subodh Ghosh was a noted writer and journalist from Bengal, best known for the romantic work - Bharat Premkatha. A popular novelist of the 20 th century many of his novels have been adapted on Indian screen – for Hindi and Bengali movies. Ritwik Ghatak's Ajantrik (1958) and Bimal Roy's Sujata (1959) are those classic ...

  5. Subodh Ghosh (Bengali: সুবোধ ঘোষ) was a noted Bengali author and journalist, with Kolkata-based daily newspaper Ananda Bazar Patrika. His best known work Bharat Premkatha, about the romances of epic Indian characters, has remained a sensation in bengali literature world.

    • (529)
    • January 1, 1980
    • January 1, 1909
  6. A prominent personality in the Bengali literary world, Subodh Ghosh was a former Bengali author and a journalist. Best remembered for his work, Bharat Premkatha, which is about the romances of epic Indian characters, many of his works have been into films. Some of the most notable adaptation of his books include Ajantrik (1958), and Suajata (1959).

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  8. Subodh Ghosh India Read More One of his early stories, “Ajantrik,” was about a taxi that had a mind of its own, and was memorably made into a film by the Bengali auteur Ritwik Ghatak (whose cinema was as passionate and impressionistic as his contemporary Satyajit Ray’s was restrained and classical).