The Volokh Conspiracy
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Book Recommendations from Me (and My Colleagues)
Every holiday season, the University of Chicago Law School collects and shares book recommendations from the faculty. Here are three from me:
Klara and the Sun, by Kazuo Ishiguro: A first-person novel told from the point of view of a solar-powered Artificial Friend. It is hard to say much more about the plot without spoiling it or failing to render it as beautifully as Ishiguro does. The book begins with Klara sitting in a shop window, and the reader discovers the world through Klara's eyes, as she manages to explore, understand, and misunderstand it, and develops her own deep relationships, quests, and failures. Written in 2021, but perhaps even more timely today.
The President's Lawyer, by Lawrence Robbins: A page-turner of a novel about the intersection of criminal defense and Washington scandal. The main character is a career litigator whose childhood best friend, the former President of the United States, has been accused of murdering his mistress. Plot twists, personal entanglements, and several entertaining trial scenes ensue. The author (recently deceased) was himself an experienced DC litigator, from criminal trials to Supreme Court arguments, and co-founded his own law firm, Robbins, Russell, Englert, Orseck & Untereiner, where he was once my boss.
Law for Leviathan, by Daryl Levinson: How is constitutional law like international law? Both of them struggle with the fact that there are no international law police or constitutional law police who can directly apprehend and sanction law breakers. That is because they are law for states, and so they must figure out how to establish legal rules without simply relying on any one state to enforce them. This academic but readable book argues that this is possible, but requires a range of strategies outside of simply laying down the law and expecting it to be obeyed. One of the most refreshing books about constitutional law I have read in a while. [You can also hear a Divided Argument podcast discussion with Daryl about this book, Separation-of-Powers Police.]
Here's the whole list. I also recently read and enjoyed the Grover Cleveland biography, which is recommended by my colleague Todd Henderson.
Feel free to make your own nominations in the comments!
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My kids and I just finished Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir. It's about a guy who wakes up alone on a spaceship with no clue why he’s there, only to realize he’s humanity’s last shot. It’s smart, sometimes funny, and full of moments that really stick with you.
I read the Martian earlier this year. I loved the movie, and it can't hold a candle to the book. I need to check out Project Hail Mary, but I'm like 2 years behind on my reading list.
I thought the coda to the movie was new and good.
Other than that you are right hands down.
Didn’t like the protagonist in Hail Mary.
I cannot second the recommendation of Night Soldiers (Alan Furst) enough. It is Day of the Jackal-level good.
Reading By Line: Ernest Hemmingway.
The Toronto dispatches, when he's 21-23, are just incredible. Living it up fishing and skiing across continental Europe as it flounders and darkens in the inter-War era.
Really brings home how towering his talent was off the break.
And funny! He's so much more self deprecating when he's the protagonist than when it's someone he made up.
Edward Achorn "The Lincoln Miracle--inside the republican convention that changed history." I found Achorn's book about the 1860 republican convention, really about the six weeks surrounding the May 1860 convention to be fascinating. I suspect you have to have some tolerance for reading about conventions, and the minutiae associated therewith, but once by that hurdle, it's well worth your time. Fun fact: in that era candidates did not attend the convention and depended on new-fangled technology (the telegraph) to learn what was going on. (Lincoln would go on, as president, to make significant use of the telegraph in managing the civil war and otherwise--see "Mr. Lincoln's T mails" another interesting book from several years ago, for details).
I know it's an old one and, as it's considered a classic, a lot of people here have probably read it, but I just finished Wuthering Heights, and it is just as brilliant as its reputation lends it. I was expecting a Jane Austen-ish "society of manners" type book, where landed English gentry are consumed with their petty dramas. Man, was I in for a surprise. This book is dark, even by today's standards. And while it is about landed English gentry, their dramas are anything but petty. I won't spoil anything here (to the extent a 177-year-old book can be spoiled). But do yourself a favor and read Wuthering Heights ASAP.
"accused of murdering his mistress"
Hold on, you can't say "mistress" any more. The Associated Press has so decreed.
https://www.newsweek.com/mistress-meaning-ap-mocked-not-use-word-1583801
But if you're into the word, you might be into the following song.
(I was going to say NSFW, but it's rock and roll, and rock and roll is *always* safe for work, isn't it?)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7doBMyEH_Ug
ChatGPT recommends The Secret Sex Life of Oliver Wendell Holmes: The Famous Justice's Affairs with Emma Goldman, Alice Roosevelt Longworth, Frances Hand, Nan Britton, Edna Purviance, Alger Hiss and Others.
ChatGPT adds that Holmes referred to Mabel Walker Willebrand as "Mabel Walker Wildebeest."
Judgment and Mercy: The Turbulent Life and times of the Judge Who Condemned the Rosenbergs, by Martin Siegel.
One might be drawn to reenactment of Oliver Cromwell's posthumous calamity.
Irving Kaufmann? He was quite a distinguished jurist who, early in his judicial career, sentenced the Rosenbergs to death for providing atomic-weapons secrets to one of the most evil regimes in history.
Sane progs today admit the Rosenbergs were guilty. But sometimes it seems the only time certain people support the death penalty is if it's administered by a terrorist lying in wait for his victim and murdering him in cold blood.
Leadership Secrets of Attila the Hun
Seems appropriate for the times. It is an outstanding read.
For the naturalist, Robin Wall Kimmerer's Braiding Sweetgrass is a vivid and informative memoir of a native woman living and learning with the land.
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