"Consider the series of blogger deaths in Dhaka. I had instantly reacted through my writings on Facebook after one such incident took place in February," said Srijato, who is popular for giving poetic expression to people's reaction on current events.
"Now if I had to wait for the printed book to give vent to my anguish, I would have to wait for my next book to hit the stands," said Srijato whose poems on events like Pathankot terror attack strike a chord with people instantly.
He was speaking while taking part in a debate, "The era of Bengali Books is over", organised by Publishers & Booksellers Guild, at a city book store last evening.
One of the most prominent Bengali poet-lyricist of the present time recalled the Shahbag movement in Bangladesh or the 'Hok Kolorob' movement in Javadpur University to prove his point. Such movements across the country's campuses have been fuelled not by pamphlets but through social media, he said.
Publisher, writer and Publishers & Booksellers Guild secretary Tridib Chatterjee, however, begs to differ, saying there had been 15 per cent rise in sale of books in the last Kolkata Book Fair.
"I want to ask Srijato how this was made possible? When cinema came, people predicted that other forms of art will soon face extinction. But did that happen?" he asked.
They take only four hours to complete English paperbacks
Echoing Chatterjee, Guild director and publisher Sudhangshu Dey said social media could never pose a threat to Bengali books.
"What our real threat instead is the attractive packaging and cover illustration and graphics of English books. We have to match their production quality in every aspect including fonts. And we are," he said.
If that was equally backed up by content, Bengali books can also be the best sellers in various genres of writing, he said.
Dey cited a fiction on third gender people by Swapnomoy Chakroborty and a collection of writings by eminent writer Shankar on 11 Bengali monks including Vivekananda.
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