A day after Prime Minister Manmohan Singhâ™s former aide Sanjaya Baruâ™s revelations in his book, â˜The Accidental Prime Minister â” The Making and Unmaking of Manmohan Singhâ™, created a controversy, the bookâ™s timing has drawn polarised reactions.
While the Congress has called it politically motivated, its publisher Penguin rejected the accusation. One senior source in publishing suggested it was driven by commercial concerns since interest in Singh would diminish post-polls and a controversy now would increase visibility and sales.
Reacting angrily, Congress spokesperson Sanjay Jha tweeted, âœBaruâ™s book, its timing, and the fact that the publisher is the same who withdrew Wendy Donigerâ™s book is intriguing.â He called Baru a â˜disgruntled turncoat, writing cheap fiction, a rank opportunist whose PMO contract wasnâ™t renewed for incompetenceâ™.
Sudheendra Kulkarni, who served as an aide to PM Atal Bihari Vajpayee, termed Baruâ™s decision to publish his book at this time â˜highly unethicalâ™. Activist Kiran Bedi, however said it could not have come at a â˜better time, to punish the Congressâ™.
When asked about the timing, Baru told HT, âœI would rather discuss the contents of the book. I donâ™t owe anyone any explanation on the timing.â In a separate interview to CNN-IBN, Baru said the timing was decided by the publisher, and that the book had been ready for some time now.
While Penguin-Random House publisher Chiki Sarkar did not respond to questions, Caroline Newbury, the companyâ™s vice-president of marketing and corporate communications, told HT, âœPublishing cycle depends on manuscript delivery and internal processes. Naturally, you would publish a book when there is peak interest. But there would have been interest in a book like this even later on. There were no other considerations.â
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