In dog eat dog world of commerce, in law, what we may surely have are advocates fearless in doing what their commerce guides them to, and deem it their privileged/arduous duty to see their clients, eternally pleased, by keeping the court in good humour, and never ever get on the feud side, all the time. That is as Fearless as we can get.
Dammu Ravi's review of the book Bengal and its Partition in ‘The Hindu’ is too much of stereotype political correctness and mis-information that has made the book unworthy of reading.
Someone like Dominique Lapierre and Larry Collins cannot be expected to understand the mental and emotional state of the Indian Hindus and Sikhs in 1947.
The book is not only about how the film "Buddha in a Traffic Jam" was made, it is also about the journey of the author and the most importantly journey of the till now uncoined concept of "Urban Naxal". I recommend it to all parents who are invested in their children's well-being and need to protect them from ideological contamination.