Bangladesh writer transcended literary border | Metaglossia: The Translation World | Scoop.it
Humayun Ahmed touched millions of hearts through his simple, lucid writing depicting the joys and struggles of regular Bengalis.

...

Humayun, the most popular novelist in Bangladesh, was laid to rest under the lychee tree in Nuhash Palli, his ranch in Gazipur, named after his elder son. His death on July 19th in New York, following a10-month battle with colon cancer, triggered an unprecedented outpouring of grief across Bangladesh and beyond.

"Humayun Ahmed's body belonged to the writer but the soul belonged to us," wrote Afsan Chowdhury, a columnist, on bdnews24.com. "It was not just grief for the departed but pain of the knowledge that no writer shall probably ever again depict so well what was in our own face, our fate, us."

Indeed, few deaths have been mourned like his in the country's history, a testament to the millions of hearts he touched through his writings for nearly four decades, painting with lucid, graphic words the middle-class sensibilities, its yearnings, its joy, its sorrow.