Law Books
Don't Read This Book [K] [i] [n]
Array (Kindle Edition) Evil Hat Productions 2012-04-24
Release date: 2012-04-24
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I am about to start an undergraduate Law degree at Oxford in October and was wondering whether anyone had any good law books to recommend which provide an introduction to the terms and principles covered at the start or throughout the course in...
One L by Scott Turow is a classic law student novel (Turow is a lawyer).
The Paper Chase (novel and movie) is another.
bill cooper reads a book written by a rosicrucian for rosicrucians and published in 1916. the book states that masons and illuminati are both sub ...
Besides the DOJ and FBI investigations of Sheriff Arpaio, there is also a very seriuos racial profiling lawsuit that is taking place. This is from ...
Specially during the J.D. Program.
Constitutional Law: Principles And Policies (Introduction to Law Series) by Erwin Chemerinsky
The Constitution, The Declaration of Independence, and the Articles of Confederation by Thomas Jefferson
The Second Amendment by David Barton
Kaplan
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Governor was glutton for Google
I read Gov. Jan Brewer's new book, "Scorpions for Breakfast," in about an hour last night at the kitchen table.
Here is the single thing I will remember in those 228 pages: With a maelstrom of rage swirling around Arizona after the signing of SB 1070 in April 2010, the governor at the center of it all was obsessed with every word written or scribbled about her.
So obsessed, that Jan Brewer created a Google alert for "Jan Brewer." It's a wonder that alert didn't crash the state e-mail server -- or crash the governor herself.
"I couldn't help myself," the governor writes of her Web watch.
The book provides a meticulous accounting of the red-hot hate directed at Brewer ("Hitler's daughter," "Satan's (inappropriate term)," "brainless blond bimbo"). She read many of the insults and slurs on blogs, she writes, even as her staff implored her not to pay attention to "losers.
The Alloy of Law (Mistborn: Book 4) by Brandon Sanderson ...
I have never had the pleasure of returning to a universe in quite the same way as Brandon Sanderson has managed in his book, ‘The Alloy of Law’, another Mistborn novel set some three-hundred years after the events of the series that made Sanderson a household name in fantasy, and one of the great powers to be reckoned with.
There are no all-powerful un-killable good guys or villains this time around, but the challenges are just as tough, and the cause just as necessary.
Waxillium Ladrian is a House Lord, a Twinborn who can Push with his Allomancy and use Feruchemy to become lighter or heavier at will. He’s our hero, our main protagonist, though Sanderson does allow us to ride awhile with a couple of other characters who are equally intriguing and fascinating.
While the book starts out a little contrived, in a manner I think could have been done a bit better, you cannot argue with the accomplishment that this stand-alone novel has wrought. The characters are enthralling, leaving me wanting more and more. And that’s a problem, considering how short this novel is; just over 300-pages....
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Is It Discipline or Child Abuse?ChicagoNow - Dec 31, 1969
You read that right. Judge Adams. Of Arkansas County of Texas. You know what makes it worse? He is a family law judge, and often has ruled on cases involving child abuse. Here are some distillations of his rulings: Children should never be believed.
Richmond-News - Dec 31, 1969
The final picture shows it rotting with an old lady, King's sister-in-law, standing out front, in the middle of an unkempt lawn. Shades of “Grey Gardens.” “Haunted Wisconsin,” by Michael Norman and the late Beth Scott came out 31 years ago and now it'sWall Street Journal (blog) - Dec 31, 1969
I carry legal pad in my briefcase. I rarely write it down. I put it in the computer when I get home. I have thousands and thousands of pages of old notes, ideas for books, names, scenes. As a writer you just accumulate stuff that you see. I readBahamas Tribune - Dec 31, 1969
Believe me when I say, no other book has this affect on the human mind and body. You have to ask yourself, why is it that a book that only has good in it for me just so happens to be the most difficult book in the world to read, and even when afforded




