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2,711 ratings,
4.03
average rating, 900 reviews
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published
September 9th 2008
(first published 2007)
by Anchor
binding
Paperback, 400 pages
isbn
1400096790
(isbn13: 9781400096794)
description
Bestselling author Jeffrey Toobin takes you into the chambers of the most important—and secret—legal body in our country, the Supreme Court, and revea
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avg 4.03
editions: all | this edition
editions: all | this edition
Read in December, 2008
recommended to Jessica by:
david giltinan; ginnie jones; paul glusmanrecommends it for: young ladies thoughtlessly considering a thankless career in social work
WELL. How I wish I'd had the foresight, at a much younger and more capable age, to consult some kind of career counselor! If only, if ONLY someone back then had the wisdom and charity to inform me of the existence of something called "constitutional law," and advised me to study hard, behave myself, keep my mouth shut, make influential friends, and avoid leaving a drunken trail of scribbled opinions about all my personal and political views as I careened helter-skelter along a haphaza...more
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Read in August, 2008
In the past, whenever I have gotten sick or scared about the direction of politics in this country, I have comforted myself with the idea that our governmental balance of power mediates abrupt shifts to the right (I am not worried about abrupt shifts to the left, as the country is generally too far to right already). I didn’t have hope in the Supreme Court, but I did have faith in their moderating effect on law and society.
That was until the presidential election of 2000. I was d...more
That was until the presidential election of 2000. I was d...more
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Read in September, 2008
recommends it for:
Chris Michaud
3.5 stars. This book is really about the political trajectory of the Supreme Court over the past 30 years. Toobin seeks to show a gradual, unlikely shift leftward over the years of the Rehnquist Court (followed by a striking and uncharacteristically - for the institution - speedy swing back to the right since the Roberts and Alito confirmations).
Not exactly a work of rigorous scholarship, so don't read it if you want a primer on important cases (though Toobin does a good job descri...more
Not exactly a work of rigorous scholarship, so don't read it if you want a primer on important cases (though Toobin does a good job descri...more
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Toobin's book, as mentioned in some of the other reviews, is highly readable, captivating and contains very good summaries of many of the important Supreme Court cases of the last few decades. Perhaps as important is his ability to write about the Jurist's personalities and their judicial philosophy providing the reader with the thought processes that go to work behind the decision making.
The inner workings and day to day activity of the Court was something I found quite interesting...more
The inner workings and day to day activity of the Court was something I found quite interesting...more
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Read in February, 2008
"This book is based principally on my interviews with the justices and more than seventy-five of their law clerks," author Jeffrey Toobin writes in his notes that close the book. "The interviews were on a not-for-attribution basis -- that is, I could use the information provided but without quoting directly or identifying the source."
If you read the book back-to-front -- like the apocryphal politicos who look for their names in the index before reading a book -- y...more
If you read the book back-to-front -- like the apocryphal politicos who look for their names in the index before reading a book -- y...more
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Read in January, 2008
This is an excellent book. Toobin exhibits all the qualities one could want in a guide to the Supreme Court: he is smart, knowledgeable, engaging, witty, and writes clearly and fluidly.
This is a well-organized, well-written book on a fascinating and important subject. Remarkably, it is never dull - parts I found particularly notable were his account of the Court's role in the 2000 election debacle, and his explanation of how Sandra Day O' Connor became the most influential justice o...more
This is a well-organized, well-written book on a fascinating and important subject. Remarkably, it is never dull - parts I found particularly notable were his account of the Court's role in the 2000 election debacle, and his explanation of how Sandra Day O' Connor became the most influential justice o...more
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Read in October, 2007
The book offered some good (and at times, juicy) insights into the Court that I was not previously aware of. It is a compelling tale and analysis of the Court’s recent history from prominent cases to the nominations of the justices to judicial politics.
The unfortunate side effect of this was again feeling the anguish that accompanied some vile and lawless decisions; most of all, Bush v. Gore. The naked desire on the part of the five that made the majority in that case to act as sp...more
The unfortunate side effect of this was again feeling the anguish that accompanied some vile and lawless decisions; most of all, Bush v. Gore. The naked desire on the part of the five that made the majority in that case to act as sp...more
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This book was published in 2007 and already seems a tad dated. The author suggests in the prologue that what he calls the conservative counterrevolution has resumed and hints that it might be one presidential appointment away from victory.
I began reading this just after Sen. Obama became President-elect Obama, so there doesn't seem to be any possibility of a rightward drift in the court for at least the next four years.
Nonetheless, this book offers a fascinating look at the Supreme C...more
I began reading this just after Sen. Obama became President-elect Obama, so there doesn't seem to be any possibility of a rightward drift in the court for at least the next four years.
Nonetheless, this book offers a fascinating look at the Supreme C...more
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Read in August, 2008
I’m not sure exactly what it says about me that the first book I picked up post-Bar Exam was Toobin’s accounting of the modern Supreme Court; regardless, I’m glad that I did. This well-researched accounting of Rehnquist’s reign is a fun survey of the politically and socially significant cases over the last thirty years. All the issues are here: abortion, the death penalty, affirmative action, privacy, Congress’s power to regulate commerce, the role of foreign law, the war on terror, an...more
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The author discusses the Court from about 1980 to 2007. He wants to show how politics influences the rulings of the Court, but while reading the book I was struck by the degree to which politics had influenced his writing. He wears his bias on his sleeve, which makes this book a less than reliable source of Court information. He portrays the justices with whom he disagrees as petty, rude ideologues, while portraying the justices with whom he agrees as compassionate, intelligent, and most importa...more
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Read in July, 2008
I had given this book to my partner, who hadn't read it. . . So I picked it up.
It feels really strange to say this was a guilty pleasure, but it was!
What, a non-fiction work about the Supreme Court a guilty pleasure??? Well, it was! It is extremely accessible (perhaps too accessible?), and the position Toobin takes on any issue coincides pretty closely to mine, so that made it even easier to read.
The general pictures of the book is an insider's look at the Sup...more
It feels really strange to say this was a guilty pleasure, but it was!
What, a non-fiction work about the Supreme Court a guilty pleasure??? Well, it was! It is extremely accessible (perhaps too accessible?), and the position Toobin takes on any issue coincides pretty closely to mine, so that made it even easier to read.
The general pictures of the book is an insider's look at the Sup...more
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Read in December, 2008
A juicy must-read for any SCOTUS buff. Toobin presents a wonderfully entertaining and titillating portrait of the nine justices that graced the Reinquist Court from the early 1990s to the mid-2000s, while simultaneously weaving throughout his book the more sober legal implications at stake in the many high profile cases that this Court took on over those years. And they are all here, the culture war cases of abortion rights, gun rights and gay rights; the First Amendment cases of freedom of sp...more
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More of a liberal rant about the Roberts Court than an impartial history or analysis. It is aggravatingly and stupendously biased. When my blood cools perhaps I will read some more.
(For the record, I am neither a knee-jerk liberal nor an arch-conservative; I am an independent with libertarian leanings. However, in the realm of the law, my feelings align much more with "conservatives", in that I believe that judicial restraint must be the sine qua non of the legal system. T...more
(For the record, I am neither a knee-jerk liberal nor an arch-conservative; I am an independent with libertarian leanings. However, in the realm of the law, my feelings align much more with "conservatives", in that I believe that judicial restraint must be the sine qua non of the legal system. T...more
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Read in October, 2007
Fascinating (though left-leaning) explanation of how the backgrounds and personalities of the nine Supreme Court justices affect American life and culture.
Probably the most interesting part, unsurprisingly, is about Roe vs. Wade. Justice Blackmun wrote the opinion based on viability of the fetus and on a Constitutional right to privacy. O'Connor believed Roe was sound based on the privacy argument but contended that technology would change the viability issue. (So far, it hasn't.) Gi...more
Probably the most interesting part, unsurprisingly, is about Roe vs. Wade. Justice Blackmun wrote the opinion based on viability of the fetus and on a Constitutional right to privacy. O'Connor believed Roe was sound based on the privacy argument but contended that technology would change the viability issue. (So far, it hasn't.) Gi...more
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Read in March, 2008
Toobin provides an informative if not provocative glimpse inside the inner workings of the Court, a branch sometimes overlooked but perhaps wielding the most power out of the three. Prior to reading, I could probably only name about half the justices and paint their ideology in broad strokes, so by interpolating major decisions with personal profiles Toobin dramatically increased my own familiarity with the Court. To be sure, Toobin writes for a popular audience by eschewing more technical cases...more
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Read in January, 2008
recommends it for:
Those who care about our country
This book gives a nice overview of the Supreme Court justices of the last 20 years and their major decisions. It is a light, enjoyable read with enough information to keep the reader interested, but perhaps doesn't go into as much depth about some subjects as I would like. The description of how the Court shifted to the right, then to the left, then took a hard right with the Bush (W) nominations was laid out nicely, and the process (or lack of) that went into Bush's and Clinton's nominations ...more
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
everyone
Jeffrey Toobin’s The Nine is an incredibly well written book. If you’re a follower of the Supreme Court and acquainted with terms like Casey, Lawrence, or Hamdan you won’t be able to put the book down. If these cases are new to you, then you are in for quite an education on the true workings of the third coequal branch of the federal government. One criticism of Toobin’s style is that he doesn’t go into enough detail on the legal reasoning or merits of the cases. The book reads ...more
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Read in September, 2007
recommends it for:
the politically curious
I picked up this book figuring "well, I should learn something about the supreme court, since I'm woefully ignorant", and fully expected to lose steam after 10 pages. Holy. Crap. This is an absolutely immersive and fascinating read. I now feel like I have a deeply personal or at least passingly jurisprudential understanding of each of the justices that have served on the supreme court from the mid-seventies up through the present. I have a vastly richer understanding of the legal ...more
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Read in February, 2009
A fascinating, readable account of the Supreme Court and its inner workings. Profiles of the justices and accounts of cases dealing with affirmative action, abortion, gay rights, separation of church and state, and Bush vs. Gore. Toobin is a staff writer for the New Yorker and legal analyst for CNN. Especially interesting re. influence of Federalist Society and the radical right wing of the Republican party.
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Before this book, I don't think I could've rattled off the names of the nine justices. Now I'm nursing a terrible crush on Ruth Bader Ginsburg. It's a gripping read, and Toobin does a terrific job making a dense topic pleasurable. My only beef is that the cast of characters is so dense, it would've helped to either be twenty years older or have a brief bio section in the back of the book to elaborate on their various roles.
In the midst of reading The Nine I had a chance to visit the ...more
In the midst of reading The Nine I had a chance to visit the ...more
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