As always, this series deserves 5 stars. The great RBG deserves 5+ stars. My rating shows 3 stars only because for the most part, I rate biographies 3 stars.
Notes to remember or details I found interesting:
--Ruth's mother died the day before Ruth was supposed to give a speech at her graduation but because of such an unfortunate event, she wasn't able to.
--Ruth became pregnant, which upset her then boss and he ended up cutting her salary and lowering her rank.
--Ruth wasn't sure about going to law school anymore now that she had a 1yr old baby. Her father-in-law convinced her to go, telling her that if she wanted something bad enough, she should stop worrying and make it happen. It was advice Ruth followed for the rest of her life.
--There were only 9 women and more than 500 men when Ruth went to Harvard Law School in 1956. She was so afraid to give a wrong answer in class for fear the men would think women were unfit to become lawyers.
--Her husband Marty had cancer while Ruth and him were still in school. It was already in an advanced stage when Marty found out he had cancer. Yet Ruth refused to give up. She helped her husband get through his treatments, took care of their baby, kept going to school, took over the household chores, typed up Marty's notes she had asked his classmates to share, and also typed up Marty's papers. By midnight, she would start her own law school work! This started a life-long habit of working till very late and sleeping very little. Superwoman! I love her.
--Although Ruth graduated from one of the top law schools, at the very top of her class, she was rejected by more than 40 firms because they only wanted men, not a woman, especially not one with a child.
--In 1963, Ruth was hired by Rutgers University in New jersey to teach law. She became one of the few females in the nation to teach law. She was paid less than the male teachers because according to the dean, men needed more money in order to support their families. Ruth asked if the same rule applied to a single male with no children. She was told no. So when Ruth became pregnant for the second time, she stayed quiet so as not to risk another paycut or possibly losing her job.
--Ruth helped the female professors at Rutgers University file a lawsuit for equality of pay and won. She then signed on as a volunteer lawyer with the ACLU. She was teaching full-time, and defending clients, and going to court, doing the latter for free.
--Ruth's first case in the Supreme Court was in 1973. Her client, Sharron Frontero, was an officer in the US Air Force. Sharron was unable to get benefits such as payments for housing and medical care for her husband because she was a woman, even though male officers did receive benefits for their spouses. Ruth ended up winning this case which was an important victory for women in the U.S.
--Ruth also fought for men's rights. She won by unanimous vote to get government to pay stay-at-home fathers.
--Ruth argued 6 historic cases before the Supreme Court, winning 5 out of 6.
--Jimmy Carter, noticing the predominance of male judges, started looking for women candidates. In 1980, he selected Ruth as a federal judge in Washington D.C. This was a big honor for Ruth. Her husband moved to Washington D.C. with her. At parties, the host would introduce Judge Ginsburg and people would automatically attempt to shake Marty's hand and Marty would have to correct them and tell them it was his wife. Marty was a supportive husband since the very start and so was Ruth of him.
--Ruth was too shy to brag about her accomplishments, but Marty wasn't. He did whatever he could to make sure President Clinton heard about Ruth when an opening came up in the Supreme Court. Clinton knew after talking to Ruth he'd found the right person. This was in 1993. Ruth became the second woman to serve on the Supreme Court.
--Her famous collars actually have a meaning: white lace=agrees with the winning side, black-beaded bib=disagrees with the winning side, gold=she will announce the majority opinion.
--"You can't spell truth without Ruth."
I read this book before Ruth passed away this year. She is an amazing woman and her legacy will live on.