Selected Product: | Plain English for Lawyers (5th Edition) Paperback Edition: 5th Author: Richard C. Wydick Publisher: Carolina Academic Press Release Date: 2005-07-30 ISBN-10: 1594601518 ISBN-13: 9781594601514 List Price: $18.00 Average Customer Rating: | | Getting To Maybe: How to Excel on Law School Exams ISBN-10: 0890897603 ISBN-13: 9780890897607 List Price:$25.00 Black's Law Dictionary, Eighth Edition (Black's Law Dictionary (Standard Edition)) ISBN-10: 0314151990 ISBN-13: 9780314151995 List Price:$67.00 Basic Legal Research: Tools And Strategies ISBN-10: 0735556539 ISBN-13: 9780735556539 List Price:$66.00 ALWD Citation Manual: A Professional System of Citation, 3rd Edition ISBN-10: 0735555710 ISBN-13: 9780735555716 List Price:$28.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Plain English for Lawyers (5th Edition) by Richard C. Wydick (ISBN-10: 1594601518, ISBN-13: 9781594601514). At this time we have not yet written a review for Plain English for Lawyers (5th Edition) by Richard C. Wydick (ISBN-10: 1594601518, ISBN-13: 9781594601514). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Wydick s Plain English for Lawyers--now in its fifth edition--has been a favorite of law students, legal writing teachers, lawyers, and judges for over 25 years.
In January 2005, the Legal Writing Institute gave Wydick its Golden Pen Award for having written Plain English for Lawyers. The Legal Writing Institute is a non-profit organization that provides a forum for discussion and scholarship about legal writing, analysis, and research. The Institute has over 1,300 members representing all of the ABA-accredited law schools in the United States. Its membership also includes law teachers from other nations, English teachers, and practicing lawyers.
The LWI award states: 'Plain English for Lawyers . . . has become a classic. Perhaps no single work has done more to improve the writing of lawyers and law students and to promote the modern trend toward a clear, plain style of legal writing.'
In 2003 Wydick retired after 32 years on the law faculty of the University of California, Davis. But he still teaches his favorite course -- a seminar in advanced legal writing for third-year law students. For the past eight summers he has also lectured at the International Legislative Drafting Institute presented in New Orleans by the Public Law Center, a joint venture of Tulane and Loyola law schools. There the audience consists of lawyers and non-lawyers from abroad who earn their living drafting legislation in many different languages. 'Teaching at the Institute,' Wydick says, 'is a precious opportunity to learn how much we English-users have in common with people who write laws in other languages.'
How does the fifth edition of Plain English for Lawyers differ from its predecessors? It remains (in size only!) a little book, small enough and palatable enough not to intimidate over-loaded law students. 'Most of the text remains the same,' Wydick says, 'but in the past seven years I ve learned some new things about writing in English, and I want to share that with the readers.' In addition, the exercises at the end of the chapters are different (a welcome change for long-time teachers who are tired of the old ones). Finally, the teacher's manual includes additional exercises that teachers can give to students who want or need extra practice. Totally unnecesary | Customer Rating: | | If you have been through college (which, assuming you are in law school or are a lawyer, you have) you probably already know how to write concisely. This book is worthless . . . and lame. | Totally Awesome | Customer Rating: | | I'm usually concerned about purchasing items online, especially books. However, I can honestly say that this shopping experience was wonderful. I would definetly recommend anyone interested in shopping for books to check this seller out. | The exercises really do help. | Customer Rating: | Most of the stuff just summarizes points from Strunk and White. The practice exercises are really what's helpful. Also a good reference when editing. | Dumbed-down English for people who can't write | Customer Rating: | | This book advocates the use of a Procrustean bed to turn every kind of writing, good and bad, into mediocre but understandeable prose. The advice offered ranges from avoiding use of the passive voice, to reducing the word count of sentences, avoiding double negatives, using shorter words (i.e., using Germanic roots over Latin roots, say, "begin" over "initiate"), etc. Incidentally, all these techniques were used in Orwell's 1984's "Newspeak" if I remember correctly. I have no doubt many people will benefit from the treatment - just not the kind of people who should do much writing. It's not that overwrought writing does not get in the way of effective communication (a double negative!). It's just that good writing can (and should) be achieved by hard work and practice, and not by the shortcut of dumbing down one's style. | One of those style books that ranscebds its genre. | Customer Rating: | | I'm a lawyer who is considered a wordsmith by colleagues and judges. This is one of the most important books I've ever encountered. I was exposed to it in my first law school year's writing class, and its lessons have remained with me since. Banish the passive voice! (unless deliberately and thoughfully chosen and used). This is not merely a key to fluidity in writing, but in a sense a moral imperative. Actions are attributable to actors - they don't simply occur. If you're asserting an action took place, you and your reader should know who or what you claim set it in motion. This necessitates intellectual rigor and clarity. Also, I remember and have employed for twenty-five years Wydick's apt metaphor that good legal writing is like fine cabinetmaking: the skill of the craftsman is shown by the crafted joints not requiring glue, just as the quality of a piece of prose is shown by its lack of reliance on "glue words" (read the book). I've used the lessons of Wydick's brief book as a lawyer, writer and writing teacher. I've given it to colleagues, non-lawyers and young relatives. Their writing uniformly improved. |
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