
Balance Sheet (Bengali Version)
Book Details
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Author: Debarati Mukhopadhyay
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Publisher: Deep Prakashan
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Language: Bengali
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Binding: Hardcover
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Pages: 415
About the Book
Balance Sheet is a powerful and deeply reflective Bengali novel set in Badanpur, a remote village of North Bengal ominously known as the âvillage of the dead.â The village houses the only cremation ground in the entire region, where people from surrounding villages come to cremate their loved onesâmaking death an everyday presence in local life.
The story follows Divyadarshini Sen, a confident woman in her mid-thirties and an officer of a nationalised bank. At a devastating emotional crossroads in her personal life, when she is struggling with thoughts of ending everything, she is transferred as the manager of the Badanpur bank. Unable to find rented accommodation in the village, she is forced to live in a house adjacent to the cremation groundâa setting that slowly strips her of urban comfort, ego, and emotional certainties.
Accustomed to city life, Divyadarshini is confronted with a completely different Indiaâwhere even two full meals a day are a luxury, and where rural banking is riddled with social, emotional, and systemic obstacles. Her textbook knowledge and professional training repeatedly fail in the face of raw human realities. As she interacts with tribal communities, indigenous women, displaced elderly refugees from East Bengal, cremation workers, and villagers hardened by survival, she begins to learn new lessons about life, dignity, and empathy.
Living amid the constant smell of burning pyres, Divyadarshiniâs pride, resentment, and ambition slowly dissolve. Love, hatred, jealousy, lies, and deception begin to feel insignificant. What emerges instead is a deeper understanding of consciousness, awakening, and spiritual ascentâechoing the Upanishadic wisdom once taught to her by her scholar father. An unusual bond develops between the modern banker and a simple cremation-ground worker, defying all familiar social equations.
On the surface, Balance Sheet is a sharp critique of Indiaâs rural banking system and its structural failures. Beneath it, the novel constructs another, parallel balance sheetâone that quietly calculates human desires, gains and losses, sin and virtue, and spiritual crises. What is debit and what is credit? What is an asset and what is truly a liability? Through a rich cast of unforgettable characters, the novel challenges conventional measures of success and meaning.
Profound, socially rooted, and spiritually resonant, Balance Sheet is a rare Bengali novel that balances realism with philosophyâleading the reader from waking consciousness through deeper awareness toward inner awakening.
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Description
Book Details
-
Author: Debarati Mukhopadhyay
-
Publisher: Deep Prakashan
-
Language: Bengali
-
Binding: Hardcover
-
Pages: 415
About the Book
Balance Sheet is a powerful and deeply reflective Bengali novel set in Badanpur, a remote village of North Bengal ominously known as the âvillage of the dead.â The village houses the only cremation ground in the entire region, where people from surrounding villages come to cremate their loved onesâmaking death an everyday presence in local life.
The story follows Divyadarshini Sen, a confident woman in her mid-thirties and an officer of a nationalised bank. At a devastating emotional crossroads in her personal life, when she is struggling with thoughts of ending everything, she is transferred as the manager of the Badanpur bank. Unable to find rented accommodation in the village, she is forced to live in a house adjacent to the cremation groundâa setting that slowly strips her of urban comfort, ego, and emotional certainties.
Accustomed to city life, Divyadarshini is confronted with a completely different Indiaâwhere even two full meals a day are a luxury, and where rural banking is riddled with social, emotional, and systemic obstacles. Her textbook knowledge and professional training repeatedly fail in the face of raw human realities. As she interacts with tribal communities, indigenous women, displaced elderly refugees from East Bengal, cremation workers, and villagers hardened by survival, she begins to learn new lessons about life, dignity, and empathy.
Living amid the constant smell of burning pyres, Divyadarshiniâs pride, resentment, and ambition slowly dissolve. Love, hatred, jealousy, lies, and deception begin to feel insignificant. What emerges instead is a deeper understanding of consciousness, awakening, and spiritual ascentâechoing the Upanishadic wisdom once taught to her by her scholar father. An unusual bond develops between the modern banker and a simple cremation-ground worker, defying all familiar social equations.
On the surface, Balance Sheet is a sharp critique of Indiaâs rural banking system and its structural failures. Beneath it, the novel constructs another, parallel balance sheetâone that quietly calculates human desires, gains and losses, sin and virtue, and spiritual crises. What is debit and what is credit? What is an asset and what is truly a liability? Through a rich cast of unforgettable characters, the novel challenges conventional measures of success and meaning.
Profound, socially rooted, and spiritually resonant, Balance Sheet is a rare Bengali novel that balances realism with philosophyâleading the reader from waking consciousness through deeper awareness toward inner awakening.











