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LAWYERS AND JUDGES BOOKS
Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Frank Morey Coffin. By Houghton Mifflin.
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No comments about The Ways of a Judge: Reflections from the Federal Appellate Bench.
Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by William O. Douglas. By Chronicle Books.
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3 comments about Of Men and Mountains.
- Living in Brazil, I can't remember exactly how I happened to find this book. The important aspect is that I found it, I read it and even some years later I still carry some passages in my mind, so I have to regard this book as a good one.
It is a kind of autobiographical narrative of the youth of Mr. William O. Douglas, who later in life became a Supreme Court Judge in America. An interesting aspect, is that later I learned that as a Judge, Mr. Douglas would very often give shelter to the 5th. Amendment in his sentences, and by reading the book, we can sort of understand how his personality and his passion for freedom was formed many years before. It is a first person narrative of his early years as a child and later as young man, and we can clearly understand his respect for wildlife and independence in a human's being life. Recalling his early expeditions as a boy in nearby mountains, Mr. Douglas describes us the forests, rivers and rainbow-trouts of his youth. At a certain time I started to think there was too much information about trout-fishing, but we should always forgive and understand a man when he decides to tell us about his childhood. :) This book is not about the Supreme Court Judge, but on the contrary, it is about the poor boy who grew under the mountains and borrowed some of their magnificent dignity from them. I hope to read some of Mr. Douglas' Law writings one day, so I can finally understand the whole man and close this chapter. But this will still take some years, and until then, all I can say is that I have nice memories from this book. By the way, a pretty hard to find book.
- An account of explorations within the tangled, rugged fastness of the Pacific Norhtwest, Of Men And Mountains is informal autobiography, deeply personal and revealing. A book of adventure and discovery, it is full of the excitement, the strength, and the exaltation that men have found in the wild.
The narrative at times rises to those solitary moments when man "under conditions of grandeur that are startling can come to know both himself and God." At homelier levels it moves with authority and expertness through the accumulated lore by which man has found how to survive in the wilderness and to accommodate himself to it joyfully. But always the narrative is characterized by a freshness of observation, by a shrewd wit, and by a reverential humility that mark Justice Douglas as unmistakably of the company of Thoreau. -- from book's back cover
- Author: Douglas, William O. (William Orville), 1898-
Title: Of men and mountains.
Edition: [1st ed.]
Publisher: New York, Harpers [1950]
Edition Date: 1950
Language: English
Notes: Autobiographical.
Physical Details: xiv, 333 p. maps (on lining papers) port. 22 cm.
Subjects: Cascade Range.
Wallowa Mountains (Or.)
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Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Irving R. Segal and Gerard J. St. John. By Dorrance Pub Co.
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No comments about May It Please the Court!.
Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Thomas P. Puccio and Dan Collins. By W W Norton & Co Inc.
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No comments about In the Name of the Law: Confessions of a Trial Lawyer.
Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Constance Baker Motley. By Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
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1 comments about Equal Justice Under Law: An Autobiography.
- The book was best when the Judge provides her perspective on events and personalities known to most of us only through news accounts. I enjoyed the book which was a quick read and left me hoping Judge Motely would write another book with greater detail of some of the very interesting episodes in her career. The author's career is remarkable and tracks the major events of the civil rights movement through the eyes of a women who appears to be uneasy with the role model label. I had been looking for a book on Judge Motely after reading several books concerning the civil rights movement. It is remarkable that Judge Motely has not been the subject of biographers. Her story is unique. The book would be useful for lawyers, legal buffs and those searching for true role models. It avoids legalease and is written in a manner which made it a very easy read.
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Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Mark Jones. By Allyn & Bacon.
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1 comments about Criminal Justice Pioneers in U.S. History.
- We learn by example and the profiles in this book have much to teach us. Among the significant examples is Penny Harrington, the first woman in America to lead a major metropolitan police department. As said by police historian Dorthy Moses Schulz, "Penny Harrington is one of only a handful of people who can claim to have changed American policing forever...." The lessons learned by Penny - and the important lessons she shares with others - can be read in her highly intimate autobiography, "Triump of Spirit," which was published in 1999. Penny is not only a criminal justice pioneer, she is a shining example of a woman who beat the odds and paved the way for all women who strive for a career in law enforcement. (The reviewer is the author of "Top Cops: Profiles of Women in Command," which also profiled Penny and 12 other brave women who broke through the brass ceiling of policing.)
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Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by William W. Fisher III. By Stanford Law and Politics.
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No comments about Promises to Keep: Technology, Law, and the Future of Entertainment.
Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Reg Murphy. By Longstreet Press.
The regular list price is $24.00.
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2 comments about Uncommon Sense: The Achievement of Griffin Bell.
- A well-written account by a Southern journalist who was there of a time in history and one uncommonly gifted lawyer's often underrated pace through it.
- Excellent writing by someone who obviously lived and played with Bell. Very interesting to a new "Southerner".
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Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Howard Ball. By Three Rivers Press.
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3 comments about A Defiant Life: Thurgood Marshall and the Persistence of Racism in America.
- From its rather droll beginnings: "Thurgood Marshall was born in 1908," Howard Ball's biography, A Defiant Life : Thurgood Marshall and the Persistence of Racism in America, only goes downhill. His writing style is bland and the story line follows no distinguishable pattern, aimless flowing from point to point with few overarching themes.
Unlike Juan Williams' Thurgood Marshall: American Revolutionary (a truly great biography focusing on the personal as well as the legal issues of this American giant) or Mark Tushnet's Making Civil Rights Law and Making Constitutional Law (two books that provide an excellent legal analysis of Marshall's work), Ball's book repeats stories and facts that are already well-worn and understood. Most tragic, one gets little understanding about what drove Marshall to fight the brutal system of Jim Crow oppression and led him to become such a forceful advocate of individual rights on the bench. The personal and legal story of Marshall is much more interesting and deserves a much better biography. Best to skip this one.
- Gut wrenching in its honesty,thought provoking in the truest sense of the word. It allowed me to take a step back from racial madness and see through another pair of eyes. No law can change people's attitudes, morality is judged by the majority, this book shows us. And yet it had a hopeful note beneath the surface. Initially I was put off by the inhuman, thesis sounding title.. do not make my mistake-read this book and absorb culture at its ugliest (and most honest).
- "A Defiant Life" presents the heroic life of Thurgood Marshall and his fight against racism in a compelling manner. The book does not tell a feel bad/feel angry/feel good story. There is little recourse to anecdotes, and hardly any moments for emotional release. Instead it tells what Marshall did as an advocate for the minorities - for example how he travelled many times to the South facing mortal danger to argue important cases. It also tells us of his opinions, and how they influenced his use of the legal system to help the oppressed. After reading this book, one comes away knowing that Marshall was one of the great men of 20th century America. And one comes away understanding the reasons for the far reaching implications of several Supreme Court cases.
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Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Adina Sara. By Regent Press.
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5 comments about 100 Words per Minute: Tales from Behind Law Office Doors.
- I have been a legal assistant/paralegal for over 15 years and was excited to find a book about my life. I read it in one sitting. I loved it! I laughed a lot and cried too. Thank you for the wonderful tribute to our profession.
- A masterpiece of workplace sociology! To begin with, Sara is an absolutely amazing writer: the poetry throughout, even in the prose, is stunningly beautiful. And the service she has provided to clerical workers and their bosses by writing "100 Words Per Minute" is immeasurable and invaluable.
Alice Kisch
Editor, Retired Legal Secretary
- Several years ago I read Ms. Sara's book of poetry, To Be Filed, which I enjoyed quite a bit. So I was very happy to find she'd published a new book of both poems and stories, 100 Words per Minute.
Like "To Be Filed", this book focuses on her experiences working in various law offices since the 70's. The stories are a blend of the funny, nostalgic, and reflective. For anyone who works in a law office, you'll recognize many of these characters. For anyone who hasn't, this will be a revealing peek into the real world of law. The egos, the conflicts, the deadlines and stress. It's all here. Sara weaves together tales from all over to create a coherent whole, held together by her constant longing for something different, and her continual return back to the belly of the beast.
Those who enjoy this book will also like "Legal Tilt" which also looks inside the legal world and exposes the truths hidden there.
- 100 words per minute is a lively fast read that tells stories of what it's really like to work in a Law office. Besides the crazy and wonderful characters Adina Sara describes, there is a profound message underneath about how sometimes a career finds you and that can turn out fine. A job is something that you do to pay the rent and a career is supposed to be an area where you have much interest and grow and develop. But a job can turn into a career and sometimes it can do more for you than make money. The people you work for and work with are often where the most learning lies. Adina Sara was appreciated for her skills and that is what kept her in the Law field. This is a good read for all office workers.
- Part short fiction anthology, part memoir, 100 Words Per Minute: Tales From Behind Law Office Doors is a collection of ultra-brief, wry, witty, sometimes nasty, always insightful short stories by veteran law office worker Adina Sara. From backbiting coworkers to clueless bosses to litigators of all flavors from megalomaniacal to nearly-dead from exhaustion, 100 Words Per Minute offers a wry glimpse into trials and tribulations, and what working within America's legal system is really like. 100 Words Per Minute is a singularly delectable collection, whether the stories are savored a few at a time or all at once.
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The Ways of a Judge: Reflections from the Federal Appellate Bench
Of Men and Mountains
May It Please the Court!
In the Name of the Law: Confessions of a Trial Lawyer
Equal Justice Under Law: An Autobiography
Criminal Justice Pioneers in U.S. History
Promises to Keep: Technology, Law, and the Future of Entertainment
Uncommon Sense: The Achievement of Griffin Bell
A Defiant Life: Thurgood Marshall and the Persistence of Racism in America
100 Words per Minute: Tales from Behind Law Office Doors
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