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Sameer Gudhate presents the Book Review of Courting Justice: The Terrible Truth About Our Courts by Rajesh Talwar

  • Writer: Sameer Gudhate
    Sameer Gudhate
  • 4 hours ago
  • 3 min read


Have you ever wondered what really happens behind the towering walls of our courthouses? I mean, beyond the televised high-profile cases or the movie-style courtroom dramas. Rajesh Talwar’s Courting Justice: The Terrible Truth About Our Courts doesn’t just crack open the doors—it throws them wide open. Originally published in 1995, this 30th Anniversary Kindle Edition comes updated, and trust me, it still hits like a gavel.


Talwar isn’t some distant observer. A legal insider, his words carry the weight of firsthand experience. Add to that a full review by none other than the late Khushwant Singh (yes, that Khushwant Singh), and you know you’re in for something substantial.


The book is split into four thought-provoking parts. Part 1 paints the underbelly of the judicial system through its often-ignored players—clerks, stamp vendors, touts, and underpaid, overworked staff who run the show behind the scenes. Part 2 dives into everyday litigation: matrimonial battles, landlord-tenant disputes, tax drama, and that crucial question—Who will police the police? Part 3 explores uncommon cases that rarely get their day in court but desperately should. And finally, Part 4? Titled Solution?—with a question mark, because let’s be honest, Talwar knows better than to offer a neat fix to this mammoth mess.


What surprised me most was how readable this book is. Legal writing is often dense and intimidating, but Talwar makes it human. He writes with clarity, empathy, and a refreshing lack of jargon. He doesn't just inform—he engages. His tone is conversational, sometimes even wry, which helps balance the heavy truths he's laying bare.


Okay, it’s nonfiction, but the real “characters” here—judges, clerks, lawyers, and even stock witnesses—are no less vivid than those in a crime thriller. Talwar’s genius lies in showing how these everyday people become cogs in a machine that often fails to deliver justice. He introduces us to deeply flawed systems and people with such honesty that it’s hard not to care.


The structure works beautifully. Each section flows into the next, and the updates at the end of every chapter act like bridges between the 90s and today. The fact that so little has changed over the decades is sobering. It’s not just a reading experience—it’s a revelation.


At its heart, Courting Justice is about systemic failure—how delays, corruption, and red tape make justice feel like a luxury. But more than that, it’s a call to awareness. Themes of inequality, abuse of power, and the invisibility of the common man scream from the pages. And the most haunting message? That silence—ours, the citizens—is part of the problem.


I didn’t expect to be moved, but I was. I found myself getting angry—righteously so—especially reading about undertrials rotting in jail for years. One particular story involving a marriage registration and the petty corruption around it reminded me of my own frustrating brush with bureaucracy. These aren't isolated cases—they're mirrors.


The biggest win? Accessibility. You don’t need a law degree to understand what’s going on. Talwar’s storytelling pulls you in, and his passion keeps you hooked. He balances data with real stories, which makes the issues tangible.


If I had to nitpick, I’d say the updates, while valuable, occasionally feel like footnotes rather than fully integrated reflections. But honestly? This doesn't take away from the book’s punch. If anything, it underlines just how little has evolved.


I went into this thinking I’d get a dry account of legal misadventures. Instead, I found myself engrossed, disturbed, and oddly hopeful. Because once you see the cracks, you can’t unsee them. And maybe—just maybe—that’s where change begins.


Courting Justice is not just a book—it’s a wake-up call. If you’ve ever felt the Indian justice system was too complicated or too far removed from your life, read this. It makes the invisible visible, the ignored unforgettable. Rajesh Talwar doesn’t offer solutions—but he gives us the knowledge we need to demand them.





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