As a person who is born in the aftermath of whole chaos of the Tandoor murder case and never really heard of it, this was an eye opener. Of how deeply rooted corruption, bad politics, etc are in the system (which I, who never knew of this case before thought corruption increased in my times). Politics, corruption, women, feminism, religion, hypocrisy, nepotism, unfairness, student life, police, government, media list is never ending because this case brings to light all the aspects every person come across, directly or indirectly. Something we turn a blind eye to. Dare I say, even though it was never a topic or main focus of things ever in the book, but i noticed this thing repeatedly, that a religious person need not be the ideal person the society always mark them as, which somehow feels relevant to state here in these times.
It is worth mentioning that this it's a cherry on top because it is written by and from a perspective of a person involved in the case from the very start to end.
It's reading book, not for the literature but for understanding the society we live in.
This book covers not just the politics and corruption, but other devils we need to fight together as a society and on individual level.