試す - 無料

Fishy Business and Family Feuds

The New Indian Express Mysuru

|

October 05, 2025

This murder mystery of quirky characters blends Bengali gothic literature with sharp humour and sly feminism

- By SHEILA KUMAR

A skeleton at the foot of a magnificent banyan tree, known to the family as Le Patriarche.

A cigar-smoking matriarch called Fishy, and a family feud so hilarious, it could only unfold in a mansion in Kolkata. Hemangini Dutt Majumder’s The Scratch and Sniff Chronicles takes the old trope of Bengali Gothic literature, contemporises it, and serves up a whodunnit that is some parts funny, some parts macabre, and all parts engaging.

We are dropped without ceremony into the lives of the Chaterges (yes, this is the spelling). At the centre is Basanti—fondly called Fishy by her adopted daughter Ellora/Laura and her orphaned niece Olympia/ Ollie, named after a Manet painting, Fishy belongs to an old, wealthy family that owns a mansion in Chandan Nagar outside Kolkata. She is locked ina property battle with her widowed stepmother, the larger-than-life Labanga Latika, and no fond nicknames here, thank you very much.

The New Indian Express Mysuru からのその他のストーリー

The New Indian Express Mysuru

Gill new ODI captain; Rohit, Virat in but no long-term guarantees

SHUBMAN Gill was named as the men’s ODI captain of the national team, a post previously held by Rohit Sharma.

time to read

1 min

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Mysuru

The New Indian Express Mysuru

Jadeja and his never-ending output

AROUND 1890, Karl Elsener, a Swiss inventor, had found out that his country needed a lot of tools to carry out everyday tasks.

time to read

2 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Mysuru

The New Indian Express Mysuru

The Collector's Pour

What began with stamps and miniature bottles grew into one of the world's most extraordinary whisky collections

time to read

3 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Mysuru

The New Indian Express Mysuru

When Our National Spectacle Crushes Its Own

Hathras in 2024 at a religious satsang, where followers stampede in a rush of blind devotion, while the state machinery busies itself trying to control the narrative. Even at the greatest of religious festivals, the Kumbh Mela, where millions gather, crowd-related deaths occur with horrifying regularity, often covered up and casually dismissed as a ‘logistical inevitability.’

time to read

4 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Mysuru

Fishy Business and Family Feuds

This murder mystery of quirky characters blends Bengali gothic literature with sharp humour and sly feminism

time to read

2 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Mysuru

The New Indian Express Mysuru

The Man Who Taught a Village to Draw

Artist BA Reddy's three-decade-long journey at Sanskriti School has turned weekend art lessons into lifelines for countless children

time to read

4 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Mysuru

As onion prices fall, IISc's agri saviour technology keeps waiting in the wings

PRICE fluctuation is a sensitive factor in determining farmers’ plight, but when technology waits in the wings to offer a solution that can be profitable as well as prevent wastage of the produce, there are no takers for it to reap its benefits.

time to read

1 min

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Mysuru

The New Indian Express Mysuru

Honey, I Shrunk the Netherlands

Madurodam in The Hague is preserving Dutch heritage and identity with its ornately designed, functional miniatures

time to read

2 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Mysuru

The New Indian Express Mysuru

Revisiting Childhood in Frames

Anoop Lokkur’s Don’t Tell Mother, which premiered at the Busan International Film Festival, is an intimate tale of a child navigating violence

time to read

2 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Mysuru

The New Indian Express Mysuru

The Lost Art of Agenda-free Conversations

I spent last weekend in Fuengirola, a seaside town on Andalusia’s Mediterranean coast. Successive waves of cultures and subcultures have shaped this Spanish region, each leaving its imprint in indelible ways. Yet what struck me even more than the pristine blue waters and fusion architecture was a unique conversational practice. Across Fuengirola’s restaurants, I kept noticing the same thing: tables where the meal had clearly ended but no one was leaving.

time to read

2 mins

October 05, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size