Narayan Dharap Explained

Fetchwikidata:ALL
Death Place:Pune, Maharashtra, India
Known For:Horror fiction, weird fiction
Occupation:Writer

Narayan Dharap (27 August 1925 – 18 August 2008) was an Indian writer, primarily of horror fiction in the Marathi language.[1] [2] He wrote more than 100 books and was the first Marathi author to bring H. P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos to Marathi readers. He was also a writer of science fiction and drama.

Dharap earned a B. Sc. (Chemistry) degree from Mumbai University and had lived in Africa for some time for work.[3] He died in Pune on 18 August 2008 due to pneumonia, having suffered from lung disease for some time.

Work

The main characters which can be found often in his stories or novels are: Samartha, Appa Joshi, Krishnachandra, Pant and Jaidev. There are assorted stories as well, in which there can be individual heroes/heroines who overcome a situation, sometimes with a little external help, sometimes without it. Most of his stories feature a great battle between good and evil, usually concluding with good triumphant. Dharap's stories also come from Marathi culture. The general characteristics of Dharap's books include "a victory of good over evil", "origination of the concepts in the book from Marathi culture", "keeping the story away from any kind of sexual references (which is considered an important factor in any "popular" horror or suspense literature)", "despite the books being of the horror genre, keeping the contents away from any kind of gore or offense against 'good taste'".

Horror writing is still not seen with the reverence the way other types of writings are seen in Marathi literature. Narayan Dharap is loved by most Marathi readers who have some interest in the horror genre. He wrote some strikingly original stories based on weird fiction in Marathi, also he introduced fictional mythologies in Marathi horror literature for the first time.

Some of Dharap's novels and stories were inspired from contemporary American authors including Stephen King, typically in the area of plot and geography. "Shapath" was a short story inspired by King's It and "Gramma". "Gramma" was also adapted by Dharap into the short story "Aaji", published in the short story collection Anolkhi Disha 3, "Aaji" along with "Bali" another short from the collection Padchhaya served as a basis for the 2018 Indian horror film Tumbbad.

Characters

Bibliography

Novels
Short story collections
Short stories

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bookstruck.app . Narayan Dharap . 2024-10-09 . bookstruck.in . en.
  2. Web site: Narayan Dharap . rasik.com . mr.
  3. Web site: समर्थ' गेले! . Maharashtra Times.
  4. Web site: 8 December 2011 . महेश कोठारे बनले मालिका दिग्दर्शक . Mahesh Kothare becomes serial director . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111208233404/http://esakal.com/esakal/20111208/5644160921067763888.htm . 8 December 2011 . . mr.