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Rank the Best Feluda Stories

12th Jan 2018
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There is perhaps no greater Bengali detective series than the famed writer and Oscar-winning director Satyajit Ray's Feluda (ফেলুদা) series. From his humble abode in 21 Rajani Sen Road, Ballygonj, Kolkata, Feluda or Prodosh Chandra Mitra, (প্রদোষ চন্দ্র মিত্র) becomes a celebrated private investigator over a series of 35+ novels and short stories, traveling all over India and beyond with his cousin and ever present "satellite" Topshe (Tapesh Ranjan Mitra) and his lighthearted but dependable friend Jatayu (Lalmohan Ganguly). Replete with drama, suspense, intriguing characters and Ray's unique brand of quaint humor, Feluda stories always hold a class of their own. Starting from Feludar Goendagiri in 1965, there have been 35 complete stories which include full-length novels and short stories and 2 unfinished stories, many of which have been turned into feature films for both the big screen and television. These have included such luminaries as Soumitra Chatterjee and Sabyasachi Chakrabarty and have been directed both by Satyajit Ray's son Sandip Ray and Satyajit Ray himself. Even after half a century of the publication of the first Feluda, the series still earns new fans every day. We all have our favorite stories from the series that we fondly remember and recount to each other. Which ones do you think are the best and why? Rank this list by dragging and dropping the items and hit submit to update the average. And let me and others know why you like your favorite ones in the comments below.

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Rank the Best Feluda Stories

#2.

Sonar Kella

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Sonar Kella (সোনার কেল্লা - 1971, English Title "The Golden Fortress) is the sixth story in Satyajit Ray's Feluda Series and was first published in Sharadiya Desh, 1971. The mystery revolves around Mukul Dhar, a child of Kolkata who claims that he can remember events of his previous life where he apparently used to live in a "Golden Fortress" (Bengali: Sonar Kella) and draws sketches about peacocks, forts and of battles that he had supposedly witnessed. As the boy soon gains media attention, his father happens to meet Dr. Hemanga Hajra, a parapsychologist, in his book store who offers to help believing it might also help him in his research. After listening to Mukul's descriptions of deserts and peacocks, Dr. Hajra guesses that the place he describes might be in Rajasthan. Mukul also mentions that he lived in the Golden Fortress and that their house had lots of gems. Dr. Hajra decides to take Mukul on a trip to Rajasthan hoping this may shed deeper light into such parapsychological phenomenon, as well as help cure the boy. A newspaper report about the gems Mukul describes alerts criminals in the area who plan to kidnap Mukul in hope of getting their hands on it. Their first attempt at the kidnapping fails when they pick up another boy named Mukul from the same neighborhood. By this time, the real Mukul had already left for Rajasthan along with Dr Hajra. Alarmed by the attempted kidnapping of his son, Mukul's father engages the service of Feluda to help protect his son. Feluda accepts the assignment and starts investigating the kidnapping incident, and tries to learn as much as possible from the kidnapped child, and also about Dr. Hajra. Feluda and Topshe thereafter leave for Rajasthan following Dr Hajra and on their way to Rajasthan, they meet Lalmohan Ganguly, a.k.a. Jatayu, a popular thriller-writer, for the very first time! Jatayu, who will go on to become a permanent fixture in the series, soon starts admiring Feluda's ability in observing things and wishes to accompany him in his journey to which Feluda agrees. When the trio arrive in Jodhpur Circuit House in Rajasthan, they meet Dr. Hajra, Mukul and a globe-trotter named Mandar Bose. Together they travel around Rajasthan showing various forts to Mukul, in the hopes of identifying his Golden Fortress. Meanwhile, Feluda starts to suspect Mandar Bose primarily based on his dressing and his affluent Bengali accent. He even becomes suspicious of Dr Hajra's conduct as he appears lackadaisical in his endeavours about parapsychology and decides to inquire Mukul about the mysterious bad men he described to have seen on the train to Rajasthan. Feluda was convinced by then that there was something afoot. After noticing some souvenir saucers depicting the Jaisalmer fort, which is made of yellow limestone, while wandering around tourist sites, Feluda concludes that Mukul's fort must be the same one. The trio rush back to the guest house only to find that Dr. Hajra, Mukul and Mandar Bose have left in a hurry. Feluda suspects foul play, and his suspicions are confirmed when he finds that the word Hajra has been misspelled in the attendance register of the guest house. Is this Dr. Hajra an imposter? If so, where is the real Dr. Hajra? Who is Mandar Bose? And above all, is there any truth to Mukul's claims? The search for Mukul takes Feluda, Topshe and their newfound friend Jatayu on a pursuit where they journey on foot, ride camels, cars and trains all around the majestic landscape of the deserts of Rajasthan. In 1974, Satyajit Ray himself directed a film adaption of the book, starring Soumitra Chatterjee as Feluda, Santosh Dutta, Siddartha Chatterjee and Kushal Chakraborty. The movie was released in the United States as The Golden Fortress and is fondly remembered as one of the Oscar-winning director's best films.
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