I am graduating from Harvard Law School in a few days, and I was very involved in women's issues while I was here, so I have been saving up this book to read for some time. I finally got to it recently, and I was glad to have done so before I leave Cambridge for good. The book chronicles the women of the HLS class of 1964, as they are accepted to, attend, and graduate from Harvard Law and as make their way in life and in the profession afterward. For me, the material in the first half of the book was particularly special, as it paints a picture of what HLS was like then that was both familiar and showed how far women have come in many respects. The stories are told by the classmates (including Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer) and hit on a lot of details, like being called on in class, who was dating who, etc., that I enjoyed. The second half of the book - about what came after HLS - was much more like the typical women's panel I might have organized in law school and was as discouraging about the potential for full time work and family balance as is the norm. But it was interesting to see what had become of the women and, particularly, to see the emphasis placed on networks of women being successful in the law.