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LAWYERS AND JUDGES BOOKS

Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Wesley L Harris. By RoughEdge Publications. Sells new for $18.95. There are some available for $15.16.
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4 comments about Neither Fear Nor Favor: Deputy United States Marshal John Tom Sisemore.
  1. I had never heard of Deputy John Sisemore, having read everything available on U.S. Marshals. This account of his adventures beats anything John Wayne's "Rooster Cogburn" did. Sometimes the truth is wilder than fiction. The book is written with as a "non-fiction novel" to bring the story alive, with conversations and events carefully crafted from court transcripts and newspaper articles. Even though the book reads as a novel, the author gives extensive notes on his sources at the end of the book. If you love the Old West or enjoy classic stories of good versus evil, this book is a must read.


  2. I've read about many Old West-type lawmen, and John Sisemore is definitely one of the most interesting...his zeal for the job was unparalleled. Many of his arrests were recorded in local newspapers, so we know he spent a great deal of time chasing moonshiners...a typical assignment for U.S. marshals at that time. But few did it so doggedly and with such success. I particularly liked how the author weaved family members and townspeople into the story and showed how a community fought for law & order and how the results of that battle shaped the entire community for generations.


  3. This is a very good biography of a man that history had nearly forgotten. A historical review of the a lawman that "cleaned up the town" during the prohibition period, was feared by criminals throughout the region of Northern Louisiana and died in the line of duty...a murder which remains unsolved to this day!

    If you like reading about tough, no non-sense lawmen of the west or historical accounts of Texas Rangers, you will really enjoy this book. This man had character, integrity, and a single-minded focus on upholding the law. He usually worked alone, most times outnumbered and rarely was outwitted by his adversaries.

    This should be a required reading for students in Louisiana schools...they should revere and remember the heroes that help build their state.



  4. What a joy to read this book!!!! So much history and excitement. John Tom Sisemore is my great-grandfather. I remember reading newspaper clippings about the murder but was never provided this much information of the incident and the events leading up to it. Mr. Harris has done an outstanding job of honoring the life and death of a wonderful lawman. One of the best books I have read in a while.


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Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by John Marshall. By The University of North Carolina Press. The regular list price is $80.00. Sells new for $68.00. There are some available for $57.90.
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No comments about The Papers of John Marshall: Vol X: Correspondence, Papers, and Selected Judicial Opinions, January 1824-April 1827 (Papers of John Marshall).



Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by George D. Finlayson. By Dundurn Press. Sells new for $23.99.
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No comments about John J. Robinette.



Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by James M. Stoughton. By James M Stoughton. There are some available for $172.08.
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No comments about My Savage Ancestor.



Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Lee Coburn and Alchemy Arts and Coburn Lee L.. By Red Fox Publishing. The regular list price is $18.95. Sells new for $1.60. There are some available for $0.01.
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No comments about Runaway Father.



Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by M. T. Dohaney. By Pottersfield Pr. There are some available for $4.48.
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1 comments about When Things Get Back to Normal.
  1. I picked this off a bookstore shelf a couple of weeks ago, and I'm VERY glad I did. "When Things Get Back to Normal" is a small-sized paperback, consisting of the journal the author kept for a year following her husband's unexpected death. It's not a book *about* death and grieving; it's a book (a striking, beautiful, gut-level one) that expresses how one person was *hit* by it, and how things looked through her eyes as she came to grips with what happened and eventually began to pick up her life again.

    I (age 29) lost my mom (age 55) equally suddenly, thee months ago, and I've had a hard time finding a book that spoke to me on the level I needed. The grief "handbooks" weren't doing it for me; I was put off by eminently qualified counselors and academics softly reassuring me about the "normal" steps of grieving. I headed into my mourning with an open mind, receptive to whatever my heart and head wanted to give me, so their reassurances rang hollow. Nor were flowery and poetic books giving me what I needed. I just wanted to read something, in a person's real voice, that resonated with the way I felt -- cheated, desperate, wounded. I found it in this little gem.

    This book is private, sometimes raw and painful, and other times intimate and adoring, even funny. The journal-entry format makes it perfect for bite-size reading (and if you've just lost a loved one you may only be able to handle one of these perfect, painful little bites at a time). It is clearly written not by a counselor, but by a wife longing for her husband, in real-time and in her own voice. Anyone who has lost an intimate relative will recognize the adoration and longing she feels for him, and probably the occasional anger and resentment too. I know I saw my relationship with my mom in dozens of places in this book. She misses his little quirks, re-lives their old times and re-visits their future plans, left meaningless without him to share them. She records the everyday shocks and little losses, the downs of personal torment and the gradual little ups of healing, the larger meanings and philosophical questions of life after losing a loved one.

    In the Afterword, Dohaney, a writer by profession, explains that that notebook she wrote these pages in was a gift from a friend just after her husband's death. She started keeping the journal just for herself, and only several years later did friends in the business convince her to publish it. Probably *because* it wasn't written with the eventual book in mind, her writing is the best of the first-person accounts I've seen.

    I've finished the book now, but I think I've only progressed in my own mourning about as far as her half-way point. I have a sense I'll be re-reading this again and again as I go, feeling familiarity with more and more of it each time. I don't yet identify with the end of the book, where she starts to feel ready to live the rest of her life without her husband. I'm still stuck on the pain of the loss (recent mourners can relate, I'm sure) and somehow it makes me nervous/uneasy to think I'll ever be "over" the loss to that degree. But I'm willing to go along for the ride because everything she's said so far has resonated so deeply for me.

    From my perspective, this book should be on the reading list of anyone who has lost a lover, spouse, or close loved one.



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Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by John C. Glynn Jr. and Kathryn A. Glynn. By Hereditea. The regular list price is $18.95. Sells new for $11.70. There are some available for $13.56.
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No comments about His Sacred Honor.



Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Sr. Nelson L. Moody. By 1st Books Library. The regular list price is $11.45. Sells new for $7.16. There are some available for $7.02.
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No comments about When a Judge Can't Judge - Part Two (The Conclusion).



Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by John Marshall. By Reprint Services Corporation. The regular list price is $59.00. Sells new for $10.00.
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No comments about An Autobiographical Sketch by John Marshall.



Posted in Lawyers and Judges (Sunday, September 7, 2008)

Written by Bryan Gibson. By Waterside Press. The regular list price is $24.95. Sells new for $22.46. There are some available for $16.98.
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No comments about Law, Justice and Mediation: The Legend of Saint Yves.



Page 56 of 67
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Neither Fear Nor Favor: Deputy United States Marshal John Tom Sisemore
The Papers of John Marshall: Vol X: Correspondence, Papers, and Selected Judicial Opinions, January 1824-April 1827 (Papers of John Marshall)
John J. Robinette
My Savage Ancestor
Runaway Father
When Things Get Back to Normal
His Sacred Honor
When a Judge Can't Judge - Part Two (The Conclusion)
An Autobiographical Sketch by John Marshall
Law, Justice and Mediation: The Legend of Saint Yves

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Last updated: Sun Sep 7 21:50:55 EDT 2008