Juggernaut Books is a publisher headquartered in New Delhi, India.[1][2] Starting with digital books distributed via its website and mobile apps, it turned to publishing physical books later.
In April 2016, Juggernaut launched India's first mobile-publishing application.[1][6]Priya Ramani was appointed as the editor-at-large for its digital properties in the same year.[7] In February 2017, Raghunath resigned from the post of CEO and decided to continue as a shareholder.[8] Simran Khara is the current CEO of the publishing house.[9]
In December 2017, Bharti Airtel acquired a strategic stake in the house.[10] In March 2019, American publishing house HarperCollins joined in a partnership with Juggernaut Books, becoming their sales, distribution partner.[11]
Jasmine Days by Benyamin, translated by Shahnaz Habib, won the JCB prize for literature in 2018[12] and the Crossword Indian Language Fiction Translation award in 2018[13]
Half the Night is Gone by Amitabha Bagchi won the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature in 2019[15]
The Legend of Lakshmi Prasad by Twinkle Khanna won the Atta Galatta-Bangalore Literature Festival Book Prize 2017, in the Popular Choice category[16]
Early Indians: The Story of Our Ancestors and Where We Came From by Tony Joseph won the Atta Galatta-Bangalore Literature Festival Book Prize 2019, in the non-fiction category,[17] the 2019 TATA Literature Live! Book of The Year Award-Non Fiction 2019[18] and won the Shakti Bhatt First Book Prize 2019[19]
Failure to Make Round Rotis by Mehak Goyal won the Atta Galatta Bangalore Literature Festival Book Prize, 2023, in the popular choice category[20]
Alipura by Gyan Chaturvedi won the Atta Galatta Bangalore Literature Festival Book Prize, 2021, in the fiction category[21]
Lords of the Deccan: Southern India from the Chalukyas to the Cholas by Anirudh Kanisetti won the Tata Literature Award for Book of the Year (Non-fiction) in 2022[22] and the Sahitya Akademi Yuva Puraskar 2023[23]
Age of Anger: A History of the Present by Pankaj Mishra won the book of the year, non-fiction, at the Tata Literature Live! Awards in 2017[24]
A Stranger Truth: Lessons in Love, Leadership and Courage from India’s Sex Workers by Ashok Alexander won the first book award in the non-fiction category at the TATA Literature Live! Awards in 2019[25]
Pyjamas are Forgiving by Twinkle Khanna won the Crossword Book Award (Popular) for Fiction in 2020[26]
Mahabharata for Children by Arshia Sattar won the Bal Sahitya Puraskar award in 2022 from the Sahitya Akademi[27]
Controversies
On 4 August 2017, Delhi High Court imposed a ban on publication and sale of book Godman to Tycoon: The Untold Story of Baba Ramdev from Juggernaut Books written by Priyanka Pathak Narain based on Ramdev's life.[28] After a legal battle with Ramdev, the ex-parte interim injunction was lifted from the book on 28 April 2018.[29]
In 2018, the book The Burning Forest: India's war in Bastar published from Juggernaut books, written by Delhi University professor Nandini Sundar based on Maoist insurgency and the violence in Bastar was dropped from the department's syllabus. Sundar was also indicted in a murder case filed by a woman called Vimla Baghel of her husband, a Maoist activist. But in February 2019, the professor was cleared of murder charges by police.[30]