Malay Roychoudhury, a Hungry Generation writer who appeared in Atmaprakash as Poritosh, wrote, “In Atmaprakash, Sunil Gangopadhyay, instead of telling the story, is suffering from doubts over whether to write a ‘boy-meets-girl’ type of entertainer or one on the bohemian lives of friends, as in Kerouac’s On The Road; he did not try to investigate the shadows. Therefore, it became neither Mills & Boon nor Kerouac.” The theme of travel with friends returned in Gangopadhyay’s writing with his 1968 novel Aranyer Din Ratri, which Satyajit Ray later turned into his eponymous 1970 film. This was about a trip that Gangopadhyay took with his friends—Sandipan, poet Shakti Chattopadhyay and writer Dipak Majumdar. However, Sandipan said it was mostly made up and went on to write a novel based on his own version of the trip, Jangoler Dinratri, a counter-narrative to Gangopadhyay’s novel and Ray’s film.