I'm a school student in class 12 and someone suggested this book to me. I was wondering whether i would be able to understand the nuances of the book well. If not, what can i do to learn stuff before i read the book?
Glad you are looking to read this book at your age. Superb choice. Mr Arvind Datar and team have put in great efforts in simplifying fairly complex matters argued by Late Mr Palkhivala. Don't forget to read the Appendix. In any case, keep a Constitution of India bare act in readiness - will enable easier cross-referencing.
OMG which CLAT coaching centre is making kids read Nani Palkhivala? And then these kids then come to LI posting comments about him??
Dude, please stay a 100 feet away from his books. He is a right-wing elitist who makes ridiculous rants: supporting privatisation, opposing caste reservation, supporting tax cuts for the rich and corporates, opposing the right of illiterate/poor people to vote and be in Park (when in fact they need voting rights and MP-ships the most). Palkhivala is literally the Harish Salve of the boomer generation and itβs no surprise that Salve is one of his biggest admirers.
If you gain admission to an NLU, you will see that no one takes him seriously and no one cites him in any projects. Please change your coaching centre and your choice of books! If you really want to read something that will help you in law school, read Caste Matters by Suraj Yengde (a simple but excellent book explaining casteism) and various writings by Gautam Bhatia on constitutional law.
It seems that the present government is following Nani's policies only. Those other people whom you mention are irrelevant in the context of country and governance.
What is wrong with you? Why do you have such a strong gatekeeper vibe?
1. The OP didn't mention they're being "made to read it", much less in a coaching centre. Why would you just assume that? Because when you were in 12th you didn't read anything other than prescribed course materials?
2. Palkhivala's book is still a cited source for tax law, and his arguments in landmark cases are still frequently referred to and remembered. He is still very much taken seriously in some fields and I don't know why people are hellbent upon proving otherwise.
3. If you took your head out of your behind you might have realised the book is ABOUT Palkhivala and not BY him (the OP is mistaken but they are a class 12 kid, you should be better you elitist). A biography of a stalwart lawyer might have some takeaways or at least fun/cool anecdotes. In any case, if his views are as you've described, then it's better to suggest someone to read and think critically about them (perhaps also by reading alternate, critical works) than telling them to bury them.
4. Caste Matters is a sociology book on caste, how is it a suitable alternative to the biography of one lawyer? At least if you'd suggested Waiting for a Visa as an alternative biographical read I could have taken you seriously
I actually read 'We the People", We the Nation" and one other book authored by NA Palkhivala when I was in 12th even though I was a science student then and was not planning for law career.
Don't listen to the naysayers and pessimists here. As a lawyer or someone associated with the law, our job literally requires us to read more than any other profession. So definitely expand your reading. What's the worst that can happen ? You'll disagree and criticise the author. The best that can happen is you'll learn something new or be inspired. Never limit reading and researching based on your opinions, perspective or ideologies. Read as much as you can. The best jurists, advocates and academics that I've met are well read across the field, irrespective of ideology. Don't box yourself in what anyone says. Plus if it's someone from a different ideology than that's even more important to read as it challenges your perspective and strengthens your beliefs. Don't listen to the echo chamber idiots.
Dude, please stay a 100 feet away from his books. He is a right-wing elitist who makes ridiculous rants: supporting privatisation, opposing caste reservation, supporting tax cuts for the rich and corporates, opposing the right of illiterate/poor people to vote and be in Park (when in fact they need voting rights and MP-ships the most). Palkhivala is literally the Harish Salve of the boomer generation and itβs no surprise that Salve is one of his biggest admirers.
If you gain admission to an NLU, you will see that no one takes him seriously and no one cites him in any projects. Please change your coaching centre and your choice of books! If you really want to read something that will help you in law school, read Caste Matters by Suraj Yengde (a simple but excellent book explaining casteism) and various writings by Gautam Bhatia on constitutional law.
1. The OP didn't mention they're being "made to read it", much less in a coaching centre. Why would you just assume that? Because when you were in 12th you didn't read anything other than prescribed course materials?
2. Palkhivala's book is still a cited source for tax law, and his arguments in landmark cases are still frequently referred to and remembered. He is still very much taken seriously in some fields and I don't know why people are hellbent upon proving otherwise.
3. If you took your head out of your behind you might have realised the book is ABOUT Palkhivala and not BY him (the OP is mistaken but they are a class 12 kid, you should be better you elitist). A biography of a stalwart lawyer might have some takeaways or at least fun/cool anecdotes. In any case, if his views are as you've described, then it's better to suggest someone to read and think critically about them (perhaps also by reading alternate, critical works) than telling them to bury them.
4. Caste Matters is a sociology book on caste, how is it a suitable alternative to the biography of one lawyer? At least if you'd suggested Waiting for a Visa as an alternative biographical read I could have taken you seriously
Revisit the book after a few years, you will see that your understanding has improved.
Ignore if you're a nepo kid.