Gunjan Ahlawat discusses designing iconic Booker prize book covers

Gunjan Ahlawat, a prominent book cover designer, shares insights into his work on covers for International Booker Prize winners like Tomb of Sand and Heart Lamp. In an interview, he explains his philosophy of translating literary essence into visual art while balancing collaboration and creativity. His designs for authors such as Arundhati Roy and Salman Rushdie highlight his role in shaping readers' first impressions of celebrated books.

Gunjan Ahlawat has created visual narratives for leading Indian and international authors, including Arundhati Roy, Salman Rushdie, Amitav Ghosh, Jhumpa Lahiri, and Orhan Pamuk. His covers for the International Booker Prize-winning novels Tomb of Sand by Geetanjali Shree and Heart Lamp by S. Y. Masud stand out as key achievements.

In discussing the Heart Lamp special edition, Ahlawat describes a collaborative process where editor Deepa Basti suggested pomegranate seeds. After reading the manuscript, he embraced the motif to capture the stories' themes of womanhood, love, loss, and tradition. 'I kept returning to the image of a pomegranate—bold, vibrant, full of life, but also fragile,' he says. The design features a full-color illustration layered with delicate line motifs to reflect duality and resilience.

For Tomb of Sand, Ahlawat aimed to embody the protagonist's defiance against conventions. The special edition depicts a flock of black crows in flight, symbolizing freedom and release. The paperback edition uses an atmospheric photograph to evoke memory and constraint, suggesting rather than illustrating the narrative.

Ahlawat emphasizes reading full manuscripts for fiction to connect deeply with the story. He balances inputs from authors, editors, and sales teams through iterative discussions. 'Design is service. It’s about loyalty to the text,' he notes, prioritizing clarity and originality amid digital viewing challenges.

Among his favorites are covers for Mir Taqi Mir by Ranjit Hoskote, Arundhati Roy’s non-fiction box set, and Gun Island by Amitav Ghosh. He regrets the unchosen design for Salman Rushdie's Knife, which he felt was conceptually sharp. Timeless influences include designs for The Woman Destroyed by Simone de Beauvoir and The Fraud by Zadie Smith.

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Photorealistic illustration depicting the International Booker Prize 2026 longlist announcement with diverse global books symbolizing themes of war, exile, memory, and renewal.
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International Booker Prize announces 2026 longlist of 13 titles

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The International Booker Prize has revealed its 2026 longlist, featuring 13 translated fiction works from 11 languages, including three debuts and several previous nominees. The selection highlights themes of war, exile, memory, and renewal, with the £50,000 prize shared equally between author and translator. The shortlist will be announced on March 31, 2026.

Banu Mushtaq, a Kannada author and activist, has won the 2025 International Booker Prize for the English translation of her short story collection Heart Lamp. The award recognizes her decades-long body of work addressing patriarchy, prejudice, and resistance in southern India. As the second Indian winner and the first for a short story collection, the prize highlights translated fiction's global reach.

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New York Times bestselling author Megha Majumdar visited Rollins College to share insights on her latest novel, "A Guardian and a Thief." During a talk on February 19, she emphasized the importance of embracing failure in writing. The event highlighted themes from her book and her creative process.

Haruki Murakami, the 76-year-old Tokyo resident and perennial Nobel Prize candidate, received two honors in New York last week for his career as a storyteller, translator, critic, and essayist. The Center for Fiction presented him with its Lifetime of Excellence in Fiction Award on Tuesday night. Two days later, the Japan Society co-hosted a jazzy tribute called “Murakami Mixtape” at The Town Hall and awarded him its annual prize for fostering U.S.-Japan ties.

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Alex Gibney's documentary 'Knife' explores Salman Rushdie's recovery from a 2022 stabbing attack, framing his survival and the defense of free speech through the lens of his marriage. The film, featuring intimate hospital footage shot by Rushdie's wife Rachel Eliza Griffiths, premieres at the Sundance Film Festival on January 25. It draws from Rushdie's 2024 memoir of the same name, highlighting personal resilience amid ongoing threats.

After nearly a decade of writing, E. Manawari has secured a publishing deal with Penguin Random House Southeast Asia for her fantasy novel 'The Bathala Games', which reimagines Philippine mythology. The story features mythical beings and themes of belonging, drawn from her personal experiences. It opens doors for wider reach of Filipino stories.

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Amid Cuba's daily hardships like blackouts, lingering garbage from Hurricane Melissa, and circulating viruses, writer Carlos Esquivel Guerra from Las Tunas has won the Franz Kafka Novel Prize for his work 'I Am Leopoldo Ávila'. This news brings joy and pride in a context of ongoing challenges. Author Lien Estrada celebrates the achievement despite her own illness.

 

 

 

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