A French filmmaker in Kolkata a few years ago, approached
me about a documentary on the works of noted Bengali filmmaker Satyajit Ray. He
wanted to highlight a side of Ray that remained unknown to French audiences. “We
know Ray because of his films like The Goddess (Devi, 1960). But most French
people do not know that he also made popular cinema, that he made films for
children, and that he was a popular author”. To Bengalis such as me, Ray is of
course as much an author as filmmaker. He is the creator of the detective
character Pradosh Chandra Mitra aka Feluda, of the science fiction stories
featuring Professor Shonku, and of numerous short stories. These short stories
more often than not, feature single, unattached men, who live alone and are
involved in bizarre, spooky or horrifying incidents. The short stories have been
published in collections of 12, with witty names playing on the Bengali for “dozen”.
I had finished reading almost all of them by the time I was in my mid-teens.
One of the most fascinating stories is one called “Brown Saheb-er Bari”, Brown
Sahib’s House.
Showing posts with label Mountains of India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mountains of India. Show all posts
Friday, 3 May 2019
Sunday, 1 July 2018
Weekend at the Himalayan Hotel
“How would you like to stay in a 100 year old hotel”? The
question from fellow blogger Poorna Banerjee was a purely rhetorical one, of
course. She knew that I would jump at the chance. And so it was that in the
last weekend of the month of May, I found myself escaping the heat and dust of
Kolkata for the chilly comfort of the historic Himalayan Hotel, now the Mayfair
Himalayan Resort and Spa.
Tuesday, 27 February 2018
Ladakh Travelogue Part 7: Palaces & Monasteries of Leh
We had spent just over a week in Jammu and Kashmir. Harsha, Prasenjit, Ananya, Sreyashi and I, had been to Srinagar, Kargil, Drass, Nubra Valley, Pangong Lake and were now at the end of our trip. We would spend our last day in Leh, the capital city of Ladakh, exploring the monasteries and palaces in the neighbourhood and shopping.
Monday, 3 October 2016
Ladakh Travelogue Part 4: Nubra Valley
“Of all the valleys in Ladakh, Nubra is the most luxuriant and fertile”, writes Nirmala Bora in her book “Ladakh: Society & Economy”. I had heard both of the beauty of Nubra and the fact that the dark, clear skies at night made it possible to see the Milky Way. But our start for Nubra would be somewhat slow, thanks to the overgenerous army hospitality the previous night (I had had more whisky in one night than I have in a month! Read about it here). We took comfort in the fact that sunsets were so late in Ladakh that it would only be completely dark by 8pm.
Monday, 5 September 2016
Ladakh Travelogue Part 3: From Kargil to Leh
Although Ladakh is part of the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir, it is culturally, linguistically and ethnically distinct from either Jammu or Kashmir. In fact, when one is in Ladakh, one does not say that one is in Jammu and Kashmir, but simply in Ladakh. This was my first venture into this part of India, and it was only on the 3rd day of our tour, that we actually entered Ladakh (follow the Ladakh travelogue here - part 1, part 2, part 4). What stood out to me immediately, were the landscape and the light. I had never seen any other place in India, which looked like this. So how did a place so distinct and different, come to be part of J&K?


Monday, 10 August 2015
Dzongu, North Sikkim: Holy Land of the Lepchas
North Sikkim Travelogue Part 3
For the last leg of
our 2014 trip to North Sikkim, our travel agent suggested that we try the Mayal
Lyang homestay in Dzongu. Bordered by the Teesta River in the south-east,
Tholung Chu River in the north-east and by rising mountains in the west, Dzongu
is a forested mountain valley that is a reserve for the Lepcha people. The
Lepcha are the indigenous people of Sikkim, with their own language and script,
distinct culture and cuisine and are mostly Tibetan Buddhist. Our hosts were
Gyatso and Samsay Lepcha, and their family.
Thursday, 19 March 2015
Yumthang Valley, Sikkim
North Sikkim Travelogue Part 2
For 2 ½
hours we were enchanted by the beauty of India’s 2nd highest lake,
Gurudongmar, but we finally had to make a move for the equally beautiful
grazing pasture called Yumthang Valley, in North Sikkim. After a short stop for
lunch, I and my friend Prasenjit reached the little town of Lachung, where we
would rest for the night. Our tour operator had set us up in a top floor room
and we had a beautiful view of the mountains from our window, and since I can
never sleep peacefully in a new place, I woke up obscenely early, and managed
once again, to get that “sunrise in the mountains” shot, that so fascinates
tourists.
![]() |
Sunrise at Lachung |
Wednesday, 11 March 2015
Gurudongmar Lake, Sikkim
North Sikkim Travelogue Part 1
Yumthang
Valley and Gurudongmar Lake had been on my travel wish-list for a long time.
Both of these places are in the Northern part of the Indian state of Sikkim,
high in the Himalayas of North East India. Our travel agent in Calcutta
suggested we add Dzongu, a forest valley that has been reserved for the Lepcha
peoples of Sikkim, to our itinerary. Since I am not the type who treks, me and
my friend Prasenjit chose to do the normal tourist thing, i.e. travel from
Calcutta to Bagdogra via air, and take a car from there to Gangtok, Sikkim’s
capital. A four by four would then take us for our week-long vacation in the mountains. I don’t know why, but to me, music always sounds better in the mountains,
and I find myself quietly staring out of the car window at peaks and valleys,
listening to classic rock. Sikkim is magical, they say, and the first piece of
magic happened as we pulled in to Gangtok. I had just turned on Led Zeppelin’s
Houses of the Holy album on the iPod, and as if on cue, as the first strains of
The Rain Song started playing, it began to rain! We arrived at out hotel as it
was getting dark, to the sounds of thunder echoing in the mountains.
![]() |
Thunderstorm in Gangtok |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)