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Books to Read Before Law School

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    Welcome to LearnLawBetter.
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    Want to know which books to read before law school?
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    Are you excited, and want to get a head start?
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    Stay to the end, as I provide you with my list of 10 books to read before you start your legal education.
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    Don’t forget to hit the like button if you enjoy the episode and click the subscribe button
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    and bell if you don’t want to miss any future episodes.
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    Hi, this is Beau Baez,
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    and today I want to provide you with some books you might find interesting before you start law school.
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    The list includes books in fiction, academic
    success, biography,
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    writing, history, and the Supreme Court.
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    One: Getting to Maybe: How to Excel on Law School Exams.
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    I have recommended this book for years,
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    and it is on almost everyone’s list of books to read before law school.
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    Because law school exams are radically different
    from college exams,
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    you need to start thinking about this topic now.
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    If you only have time to read one book, this is the one to read.
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    Two: To Kill a Mockingbird.
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    This classic novel, which is also a movie, follows the life of a small town lawyer and his family.
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    This novel is a classic because it shows a lawyer defending the legal rights of an unpopular defendant
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    charged with committing a horrible crime.
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    Three: One L.
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    This autobiographical work follows the life of a first year law student at Harvard Law School.
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    Though it's a few years old,
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    it still captures much of what law students go through during the 1st year of law school.
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    Four: The Bramble Bush.
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    Another book on many lists,
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    this collection of lectures was given to Columbia law students in 1929.
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    The author discusses legal reasoning, exam taking skills,
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    and other topics that are still relevant to law students.
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    Five: The Elements of Style.
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    This book is needed in every writer’s library
    because, guess what,
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    law students and lawyers are writers.
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    Read through this book and begin learning how to write well
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    because the top grades in law school go to the best writers.
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    Six: Gideon’s Trumpet.
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    Read the story of a poor man who was arrested for a crime he did not commit.
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    But, because he could not afford a lawyer, he was convicted and sent to prison.
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    Follow his story as he takes his case all the way up to the Supreme Court.
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    Seven: A History of American Law.
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    This is a history of American law from the colonial period up through the 21st century.
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    Learn about the successes and failures of the American legal system.
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    Eight: The Paper Chase.
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    This fictional story of a Harvard law student introduces the famous Professor Kingsfield,
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    who takes pleasure in destroying first year law students in his contracts class.
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    Though Kingsfield is a fictional character,
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    many believe there was an actual professor that was like Kingsfield at Harvard.
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    Several years ago I was talking to a Harvard Law School graduate,
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    who claimed he had the real-life professor that inspired Professor Kingsfield.
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    This lawyer told me that he and another law school student were on a rowboat shooting ducks,
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    when another rowboat approached their boat.
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    To their surprise it was their professor, Professor Kingsfield.
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    He asked them if they had shot all the ducks in the boat, and after they told him yes,
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    he took out his shotgun and shot out the bottom
    of their boat.
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    Apparently there was a time when professors could sink someone else’s boat
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    and not get arrested.
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    By the way, you can watch the movie if you don’t want to read the book.
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    Nine: Miracle at Philadelphia: The Story of the Constitutional Convention.
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    In this easy to read book, follow the fascinating story on how the U.S. Constitution was created.
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    Ten: Yankee from Olympus.
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    This mid-20th century classic is a biography of the great supreme court justice,
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    Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
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    The story begins with a fascinating account of his family,
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    including his famous father,
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    who a Harvard Medical School Professor and Dean, as well as a noted minor poet.
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    The book then delves into the story of the
    great supreme court justice.
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    And with that, go and read!
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    And in the comments, provide me with the books you would recommend to future law students.
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Books to Read Before Law School
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Video Language:
English
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05:11
Nguyen Minh Hien QP1456 edited English subtitles for Books to Read Before Law School
Nguyen Minh Hien QP1456 edited English subtitles for Books to Read Before Law School

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