Away from intense media glare which Nasreen has always enjoyed since early 1990s, Selina Hossain, another Bangladeshi writer commanding a far higher stature, got an anonymous threat letter from the zealots for flagging in her short stories and novels the issue of exploitation of women in a patriarchal society.
When Hossain Among got congratulatory messages on her being appointed as the head of Bangladesh Children's Academy in May 2014, there was an anonymous letter, which asked her to "behave" like a Muslim woman by wearing a veil.
This is the first time Hossain has let the world know about the threat letter in her article "The Boatman's Wife and Other Short Stories" published in the latest issue of monthly magazine "The Equator Line".
However, this was not the first time that Hossain faced the fundamentalists' ire. Way back in 1998, the fundamentalists wrote to the then Prime Minister that she be whipped in public 80 times after her story "Moiram Does not Know what Rape Is" was published.
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The furore led to several inquiry committees many of whose members knew the writer personally and she escaped being flogged, according to Hossain.
What has angered the fundamentalists in Hossain's writings is the hard-hitting manner in which she brings out the standing of women and the humiliation they are subjected to in a male-dominated society in which bias and resultant discrimination are deeply ingrained and are denied their sexuality.
The story begins at the writer's own home on the bank of Korotoa river in northern Bangladeshi district of Bogura.