Synopses & Reviews
The Pulitzer Prize winning constitutional historian Leonard Levy here collects eight of his most important essays of recent years. Written with his characteristic erudition, clarity, directness, and verve, these explorations into the history of the law are at once an entertainment and an education. Mr. Levy begins with a long essay on the Ranters, the ornery radicals who confronted the state and repudiated the moral law in mid-seventeenth-century England. He continues with anecdotes about Supreme Court justices and a highlight of the book a fascinating behind-the-scenes view of the deliberation over the Pulitzer Prizes. His chronicle of a long debate with Harvard University Press over the publication of his book on blasphemy is eye-opening and confounding. He concludes with essays on the origins of the Fourth Amendment; on the critics of his prize-winning study of the Fifth Amendment; and on Lemuel Shaw, chief justice of Massachusetts from 1830 to 1860, whom Mr. Levy calls America's greatest magistrate. Together these essays are continuing proof of Mr. Levy's unmatched powers in producing readable and important scholarship.
Synopsis
A collection of eight essays exploring the history of the law. Begins with material on the Ranters, ornery radicals who confronted the state and repudiated the moral law in 17th-century England, and continues with anecdotes about Supreme Court justices, and a fascinating behind- the-scenes account of the deliberation over the Pulitzer Prizes in history. Lacks a subject index. The author, whose Origins of the Fifth Amendment was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in history, is formerly professor of Constitutional history at Brandeis University.
Synopsis
Written with characteristic erudition, clarity, directness and verve, these explorations into the history of law are both entertaining and educational.