There is a particular kind of horror that does not rely on jump scares or shock value. It is the kind that settles quietly into your mind — the dark lake that no one will talk about, the mirror that shows you something that is not quite you. This is the horror that Bidisha Bhattacharyya writes. And at an age when most people are still figuring out who they are, she has already published five solo books, co-authored over thirty anthologies, and built a reader community that keeps coming back for more.
This is her story.
A Voice Born in West Bengal
Bidisha Bhattacharyya grew up in West Bengal, India — a state with a literary tradition so rich it has produced Nobel laureates, celebrated filmmakers, and some of the most beloved storytellers in the subcontinent. It is also a state steeped in folklore, in ghost stories passed between generations, in the kind of quiet, atmospheric dread that makes Indian horror unlike any other in the world.
It is no surprise, then, that when Bidisha began to write, she reached for the dark and the beautiful in equal measure. She completed her degree in BA Honours in English Literature — a foundation that gave her the language to articulate the worlds building inside her head — and went on to work as a Promo Producer, freelance writer, and copywriter. But fiction, and particularly horror, was always where her truest voice lived.
Five Books. Multiple Genres. One Distinctive Voice.
What makes Bidisha genuinely unusual as an author is the range she commands. Most writers in the indie fiction space stake out one territory and stay there. Bidisha moves between horror, haiku poetry, open letters, and suspense fiction — and she does it convincingly.
Flash Pack was her first solo fiction book, published through Evincepub Publishing House and available on Amazon, Kindle, and Google Books. It announced her as a fiction writer with something original to say.
The Girl in the Photo, her second solo book, published through Notion Press Xpress Publishing, is where her horror voice came fully into its own. The premise is deceptively simple: a young woman named Lily moves into what she expects to be an ordinary house. What she finds instead is something that defies explanation. The horror here is psychological and intimate — it lives in the small, wrong details, the things that should be familiar but are not. The scene where Lily looks into a mirror and watches her own reflection smile back at her with someone else's eyes is the kind of image that readers describe as impossible to forget. Wattpad readers called it "spooky and dark" and "such an interesting read" — and those early online readers were the first signal that Bidisha had found her audience.
Haiku Love: Lost in Thoughts, her third book, published through KDP, showed the other side of her creative life. Haiku is one of the most demanding poetic forms in existence — seventeen syllables to hold an entire world. Bidisha's collection demonstrated that her range was not a marketing decision but a genuine creative truth: she is a writer who feels equally at home in the precise and the expansive.
Poetry for a Change, published by Fanatixx Publication, confirmed her as a poet with something real to say — not decorative verse, but poetry with intention and emotional weight.
And then came Whispers in the Water, her fifth solo book — and arguably her most ambitious. A young woman named Rimi travels to her aunt's village expecting nothing unusual. What she finds is a village that has closed itself around a secret, a dark lake that draws her in ways she cannot explain, and dreams of a woman from the past that feel less like dreams and more like warnings. The horror here is slow, atmospheric, and deeply rooted in Indian rural landscape — the kind of setting that feels both familiar and utterly strange. It is the kind of book that reminds you why regional horror, told by someone who actually knows that world, hits differently from anything imported.
More Than Thirty Anthologies — and Why That Matters
Alongside her solo work, Bidisha has co-authored over thirty anthology books, published through houses including Spectrum of Thoughts, Flairs and Glairs, and Unvoiced Heart. Titles like Diurnal Extract, Tainted Maples, Tangerine, and Crescent Moon carry her voice alongside other writers — a collaboration model that has given her both breadth of readership and a community within the literary world.
This is not a small achievement. Most debut authors struggle to publish one book. Bidisha has built an entire body of work across multiple formats, multiple publishers, and multiple genres — and she has done it while still in her twenties.
Awards That Recognize the Work
The literary community has taken notice. Bidisha has received multiple awards including the Best Writer Award of 2021 from AwardsArc, Prime India Awards, Rising Star Awards, and Bharatiya Youth recognition. These are not self-nominated accolades — they are acknowledgements from organizations that review a wide field of writers and single out the ones doing something genuinely worthwhile.
For a young indie author in India, this kind of institutional recognition is meaningful. It signals that the quality is real, and that her work stands up not just against reader enthusiasm but against critical evaluation.
The Instagram Community: @amazingauthor
Find Bidisha on Instagram at @amazingauthor and you will see an author in the middle of building something. With over 200 posts and a growing readership, she is already doing what the best author-creators do: using social media not just to sell, but to share the craft. Her content spans writing tips, story structure discussions, book spotlights, and the kind of personal, process-driven posts that make readers feel like they are part of an author's journey rather than just recipients of a marketing message.
Her Amazon Author Central page links directly from her profile — a smart, practical choice that makes the path from follower to reader to buyer as frictionless as possible.
What Comes Next
With 14 books on Goodreads and an average reader rating of 4.25 across 104 ratings, Bidisha's audience is engaged and vocal. The readers who find her books tend to finish them and come back for more — which is the most honest signal of a writer with genuine talent.
She is, by any reasonable measure, at the beginning. Five solo books and thirty-plus anthologies before the age of thirty is a foundation, not a ceiling. The horror subgenre she has carved out — atmospheric, Indian-rooted, psychologically unsettling — is precisely the space that Indian readers are hungry for and that international horror audiences are only beginning to discover.
The lake in Whispers in the Water holds its secret just beneath the surface. The mirror in The Girl in the Photo shows you something you were not meant to see. Bidisha Bhattacharyya's writing does what all great horror writing does: it makes you look anyway.
Where to Find Bidisha's Books
All of Bidisha Bhattacharyya's solo books are available on Amazon India and Amazon.com. Her full catalogue can be found on her Amazon Author Page and on Goodreads.
Whispers in the Water — Horror Fiction
The Girl in the Photo — Horror Fiction
Haiku Love: Lost in Thoughts — Poetry
Poetry for a Change — Poetry
Flash Pack — Fiction
Follow her on Instagram at @amazingauthor for writing tips, book updates, and a look inside the creative life of one of India's most prolific young authors.
Published by Literaire Milestone Book House (LMBH). For author features, collaborations, or book marketing enquiries, contact LMBH.
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