Review of Horrors Next Door: Short Stories of Rabindranath Tagore by Rabindranath Tagore (Author), Prasun Roy (Translator)


Rating: 5/5

I picked up this book because I love small, sharp stories that stay with me after I close the page. I am Bengali and I like this book. Reading it felt like someone had opened a small window into older, quieter fears of home and neighborhood. The book is a slim collection released in English and presented as a set of eight horror tales translated for readers who do not read Bengali.

Rabindranath Tagore

I don't have the authority to review the great author. I know his place in literature is huge, almost like a guiding light for many of us who grew up with his words. That makes me careful when I write about these stories. What I can say from my point of view is that the original tales come from a part of his writing where everyday life slips into strange, uncanny moments. He wrote some of the most memorable ghosty and mysterious pieces in Bengali fiction, and those moods are what drew me in.

Prasun Roy

As a reader who knows Bengali, what mattered most to me was how the translator handled the mood and small cultural details. I felt the translator worked carefully to keep the tone simple and the sentences easy to follow. The language in English reads naturally - not heavy, not distant. For me that meant the quiet tension of the stories stayed intact, and the odd little cultural touches did not feel lost. The translation makes these old tales feel like they are being told to me by a neighbor over tea, and that closeness is rare in translated horror.

On the stories and the feeling they give

I loved how the stories make ordinary places feel slightly off. They do not try to shout or shock. Instead they build a slow, settling unease that creeps up on you. For me, reading them felt like walking through familiar lanes and noticing shadows that weren’t there before. The writing keeps the focus on people and small details, so the horror comes from what the characters feel and remember, not from big explanations. I enjoyed that quietness a lot.

How this book helps non-Bengali readers

Because these tales are now in readable English, someone who never learned Bengali can taste a side of the author that is not only lyrical but also eerie and human. I think this collection is a gentle way for non-Bengali readers to meet his fiction beyond poems and famous stories. The translator has made choices that keep the stories accessible, so a reader unfamiliar with the cultural background can still follow the mood and the little social cues that matter to the plot. That matters to me as a Bengali - I want others to feel what I felt without needing to know every original phrase.

A final, personal note

I am aware of the weight of praising work by such a great writer. I don’t have the authority to judge him, I only share how these English versions touched me. For me this book worked as a bridge - it brought those close, uncanny moments of the original tales into a language I could share with friends who don’t read Bengali. I finished the book feeling pleased, a little haunted, and glad that these stories can now sit on more shelves and be read by more people.

Review of Once Upon a Town by Priya Sharma


Rating: 5/5

When I put the book down the first time I felt calm and held. The tone is gentle and the pages move at the pace of someone telling you about their day over chai. I read a story, paused, thought about it, and then read the next one. That slow, easy rhythm stayed with me through the whole collection.

What the book felt like to me

To me this is a book about small, ordinary moments that mean a lot. It does not try to surprise you with big twists. Instead it finds beauty in the usual things: a memory that comes back out of nowhere, a short kindness that matters, the way a town can carry someone’s past. Reading it felt like walking through streets I had been to before and noticing details I had missed.

Writing style and language

The writing is simple and warm. Sentences are clear and often a little musical. The language does not get heavy or showy. The author trusts small images and quiet lines to do the work. That made the book very readable for me. I could focus on what the characters were feeling instead of getting pulled into complicated phrasing.

The town and the atmosphere

The town in these stories is more than a setting. It feels alive. Streets, shops, and everyday corners are described in a way that made me picture them clearly. The atmosphere is nostalgic but not cloying. It has familiar sounds, familiar smells, and people who seem to have lived long enough to have small secrets and soft regrets.

Characters and how I connected with them

The people in this book are ordinary in the best way. They are not famous. They do not do heroic things. Yet I cared about them. The author gives just enough detail to make each character feel real. I did not need long backstories to feel affection or to understand why a small scene might matter to them.

Pacing and structure

Because this is a short story collection, the pace changes from one piece to the next. I liked that. Some stories are like a single perfect snapshot. Others take a little longer and let a feeling unfold. The variety kept the reading interesting, and the short length of many pieces made it easy to stop and come back without losing anything important.

Emotional notes that stayed with me

There are quiet moments in this book that I have kept thinking about. A memory that arrives like a sound, a small kindness that brightens a day, the gentle ache of something remembered. These are not dramatic jolts. They are soft, honest feelings that linger. For me the book worked because it respected those small emotions.

A very small critique

If I have to point out one tiny thing, I would say that a couple of stories followed familiar shapes for me. I sometimes wanted one of them to push a little further or change direction. That feeling did not ruin the experience. It only made me wish for an extra surprise once or twice.

Who I think will love this book

I would recommend this to readers who like quiet, character driven stories. If you enjoy books that feel like a short walk through a memory, this will suit you. It is great for evenings when you want something gentle and thoughtful rather than loud and plot heavy.

Final thoughts

Overall I enjoyed this collection a lot. It is warm, readable, and full of small human truths. It made me slow down and notice little things. If you want a book that comforts and lingers, this one fits that mood very well.