Atripta Ashariri || Pallavi Sengupta's horror novel is coming back after almost three years || Trending
Atripta Ashariri || Pallavi Sengupta's horror novel is coming back after almost three years || Trending is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
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Book Details
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Publisher: Deep Prakashan
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Author: Pallabi Sengupta
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Language: Bengali
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Binding: Hardcover
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Number of Pages: 240
About the Book
Atripta Ashariri is a dark, unsettling Bengali horror novel where mythology, Tantra, desire, and curse intertwine across time and geography.
Set in the village of Ajutpur, the story begins with zamindar Shiladitya Singharay, a man wealthy beyond measure yet powerless as a husband—incapable of giving his young wife Saudamini the one thing she longs for: a child. Desperate to escape this despair, Shiladitya turns to his Tantric guru Ballav Shastri, whose prescribed solution is so terrifying that even the zamindar recoils. But Saudamini, consumed by the hunger for motherhood, is willing to accept any horror—even if it brings a curse upon Ajutpur itself.
Parallelly unfolds another narrative in a small tribal village called Kheyajhari, where an ancient tree is believed to imprison a bloodthirsty witch who feeds on the blood of children. To appease her, the villagers have observed the sinister ritual of Daini Pujo for generations.
Enter Tamoghna, a city-bred young man who arrives near Kheyajhari and gradually falls in love with a tribal girl named Rihu. Their romance, however, is soon followed by a grotesque tragedy in Tamoghna’s family—one with no clear explanation. Slowly, Tamoghna himself begins to change, overtaken by brutality and violence.
Is Rihu merely human—or something far more terrifying?
Why is Kheyajhari cursed?
What horrific truth binds Saudamini and Shiladitya’s lives from nearly two centuries ago to the present?
Which parts are myth, which are lies—and which hide an unspeakable truth?
Returning after nearly three years, Pallabi Sengupta delivers a haunting, layered horror novel that blends folk belief, psychological dread, and supernatural terror. Atripta Ashariri is a chilling exploration of unsatisfied desire, ancestral sin, and evil that refuses to remain buried.


