Reddit Reddit reviews Gideon's Trumpet: How One Man, a Poor Prisoner, Took His Case to the Supreme Court-and Changed the Law of the United States

We found 4 Reddit comments about Gideon's Trumpet: How One Man, a Poor Prisoner, Took His Case to the Supreme Court-and Changed the Law of the United States. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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Gideon's Trumpet: How One Man, a Poor Prisoner, Took His Case to the Supreme Court-and Changed the Law of the United States
Paperback with black design of the court pillars and Gideon.
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4 Reddit comments about Gideon's Trumpet: How One Man, a Poor Prisoner, Took His Case to the Supreme Court-and Changed the Law of the United States:

u/HarbingerOfFun · 7 pointsr/law

I read [Gideon's Trumpet] (http://www.amazon.com/Gideons-Trumpet-Anthony-Lewis/dp/0679723129) in middle school. Had a tough time with it at the time, but it did stoke my interest in criminal law, so there's that.

u/matt45 · 6 pointsr/law
u/aelphabawest · 6 pointsr/LawSchool

Personally, I read for fun in my spare time and usually learn about other things (which inevitably I manage to relate back). I've also found that audiobooks are awesome for law school. I have to cook, I have to do laundry, I have to clean the house, walk to the grocery store, and all of those things can be done while listening to an audiobook. Some of the below were listened to, others were read traditionally.

That being said, this book on the Warren Court was "recommended" in Con Law and I found it short and revealing about a significant era in SCOTUS history.

I adored Sonia Sotomayor's autobiography, which was more about her youth and early career but felt like listening to a bad ass Aunt talk about her life choices when she was my age.

Gideon's Trumpet (Although if, era of the book be damned, if it described lawyers as "young men" one more time, I swear to god...)

Sisters in Law also felt like a nice preview of Con Law - a lot of the cases we read in Con Law were familiar to me as I'd read that before then.

Pop-crime books that I nevertheless got me thinking about law when I read them include In Cold Blood (which I listened to while in Evidence class and found myself being like - wait, why isn't this a 403 violation or hearsay? and then looking the law up to clarify the rule I hadn't quite started learning yet) and Missoula: Rape and the Justice System in a College Town.

I also highly recommend the podcasts Radiolab: More Perfect (spin off); the Radiolab episode The Buried Bodies Case; and the podcast Stuff You Missed in History Class, many episodes of which are either explicitly about a court case (they have several on like, Loving v. Virginia, Brown v. Board, the cases about special education) or more related to lesser known policies that didn't really make it to Court (e.g., the Bracero program).

Edit: typo

Edit 2: The More Perfect episode, "The Political Thicket," which came out two weeks after I took my Con Law exam, was pretty much straight up the answer to question #3 on my exam.

u/darkneo86 · 3 pointsr/pics

I’ve read that! It is an amazing story, Gideon vs Wainwright I think. But that’s pretty specific and doesn’t really dive in to the SC in general. It does, but it doesn’t.

If anyone wants to read it, highly recommended. https://www.amazon.com/Gideons-Trumpet-Prisoner-Supreme-Court/dp/0679723129

Gideon v Wainwright was the landmark case that provided the defendant with an attorney, even if they didn’t have the money.

Edit: yeah, even the Wiki is good. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gideon_v._Wainwright

Favorite quote, on his tombstone actually, paraphrased “Each era finds an improvement in law, for the benefit of mankind.” And he’s right.