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⋙ PDF How to Feed a Lawyer And Other Irreverent Observations from the Legal Underground Evan Schaeffer 9780988391000 Books

How to Feed a Lawyer And Other Irreverent Observations from the Legal Underground Evan Schaeffer 9780988391000 Books



Download As PDF : How to Feed a Lawyer And Other Irreverent Observations from the Legal Underground Evan Schaeffer 9780988391000 Books

Download PDF How to Feed a Lawyer And Other Irreverent Observations from the Legal Underground Evan Schaeffer 9780988391000 Books

Do lawyers take themselves too seriously? Some might, but not lawyer Evan Schaeffer. His book How to Feed a Lawyer (and Other Irreverent Observations from The Legal Underground) is a compilation of reader favorites from his widely-read blog, The Legal Underground. Featured in the New York Times and quoted by The Economist, The Legal Underground has been called "one of the most consistently amusing" legal blogs. In his book, you'll find "An Introduction to Lawyers for Those Who Have Not Yet Had the Pleasure of Being Introduced," a description of the Sixteen Types of Lawyers, and a tongue-in-cheek advice section for young lawyers, law-firm partners, families of lawyers, and federal judges. You'll also find thoughts on "Things Important to Every Lawyer," including essays on the lawyer's briefcase, the circle of advisors, a satisfying hobby, and a giant brain. The book also includes personal anecdotes such as "The Horror of One Lawyer's First Deposition" and an account of a night spent drinking with Christopher Hitchens. For years, one of the most popular legal blogs, The Legal Underground has been recognized by (in addition to the New York Times and The Economist) the ABA Blawg 100, The National Law Journal, the ABA Journal, Chicago Lawyer, FindLaw's Modern Practice, Harvard Law School's The Filter, Australia's Practice Source, the ABA Journal eReport, and many other publications and websites.

How to Feed a Lawyer And Other Irreverent Observations from the Legal Underground Evan Schaeffer 9780988391000 Books

There are a few types of lawyer-writers than Evan Schaeffer makes fun of in his "How to Feed a Lawyer"- namely, lawyers who want to break out of being a lawyer by writing a legal thriller, and law bloggers. This book is essentially an extension of Schaeffer's popular legalunderground.com, but, like the blog, the book falls into none of the navel-gazing traps into which the professional-turned-memoirist usually settles.

Indeed, throughout the book, Schaeffer is aware of what he is doing, and frequently comments on how a certain section is going, or the state of a sentence, while he is writing it. One section can spend the bulk of its time explaining or apologizing for what the last one did. This sounds coy, but it is done with such a light touch and a has such a giddily surreal quality that it never gets tiresome or stops being amusing. And it is more than that, as I figured out 40 or 50 pages in: throughout the book, Schaeffer is pleading his case for its existence, as if he is arguing in court why this book should be written. I don't know if that was intentional or not, but it gives the whole book a certain recursive charm. It helps too that it is consistently funny.

I titled this "Hodgman for the Legal Set", because I think fans of one would enjoy the other. His "16 Types of Lawyers" has, intermixed with normal, assumed types, the Lawyer on the Run, who made some bad choices, and now is going to be killed. His advice columns feature questions that range from how to take your secretary out to lunch to what to do if your building is cursed. It is our world, but at an oblique angle, where there is a wealth of strangeness and even sadness behind the expensive suits and crushing workloads and sacrificed personal lives.

I think that oblique angle allows Schaeffer to get into what is important to him without being pedantic: the nobility of the profession in theory and in practice. He has scorn for those who abuse the law, who treat it as a game, who use litigation tactics as a way to avoid the truth. It is never heavy-handed, but there is an anger there. His blog reflects an eclectic taste, and it is that kind of learning which, I think, lets him see that there is a purity to the law, that it exists as an ideal, unto itself, and not just a tool.

That's a long way for a book that is, at its heart, wildly funny. The reader is drawn through verbal mazes one step behind a winking guide. For a book that ostensibly teaches you what you need to know about dealing with lawyers, Schaeffer proves that the practice is as weird, unpredictable, and as idiosyncratic as the human race.

Product details

  • Paperback 228 pages
  • Publisher Palermo Publishing Company (September 20, 2012)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 0988391007

Read How to Feed a Lawyer And Other Irreverent Observations from the Legal Underground Evan Schaeffer 9780988391000 Books

Tags : How to Feed a Lawyer: And Other Irreverent Observations from the Legal Underground [Evan Schaeffer] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Do lawyers take themselves too seriously? Some might, but not lawyer Evan Schaeffer. His book How to Feed a Lawyer (and Other Irreverent Observations from The Legal Underground)</i> is a compilation of reader favorites from his widely-read blog,Evan Schaeffer,How to Feed a Lawyer: And Other Irreverent Observations from the Legal Underground,Palermo Publishing Company,0988391007,LAW Legal Profession
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How to Feed a Lawyer And Other Irreverent Observations from the Legal Underground Evan Schaeffer 9780988391000 Books Reviews


Evan Schaeffer is a unique lawyer for three reasons. He's extremely successful (rare in any profession) yet he also has a sense of humor (rare among lawyers) and is down to earth (even more rare).

In How to Feed a Lawyer, Evan offers insights and commentary about the legal system and through humorous essays, also shares what it's like being a lawyer.

His short essays on "the 16 types of lawyers" are where Evan really shines. In short essays he describes what we lawyers all know as *that* guys. For example, there's not a trial lawyer in the world who isn't convinced he has a true-crime novel in him. There's a separate entry devoted to that lawyer.

Evan's "Dear Abby" style advice columns are amusing as well. "Paging Dr. Freud" was my favorite.

The only criticism I would make is that Evan suffers from the affliction most lawyer-writers have. He is a lawyer - a top trial lawyer, actually. Because of that, he can't totally "let loose" when writing. After all, anything a lawyer says can and will be used against him.

I'd love to see what Evan would write if he went "all in" on a book and wrote without a concern for his reputation as a lawyer.

That said, just as every person has a book inside of himself or herself, every lawyer does, too.

Evan's book is well-written, insightful, and worth reading.
Loved this book! Great fun to read and excellent writing by a Midwest lawyer who loves to poke fun at himself and his profession, while educating & enlightening his readers -- who are most likely -- though don't have to be -- fairly informed on the legal profession. The author's humorous, engaging style compliments the posts on his webpage [...]
An entertaining, smart, fun read.
There are a few types of lawyer-writers than Evan Schaeffer makes fun of in his "How to Feed a Lawyer"- namely, lawyers who want to break out of being a lawyer by writing a legal thriller, and law bloggers. This book is essentially an extension of Schaeffer's popular legalunderground.com, but, like the blog, the book falls into none of the navel-gazing traps into which the professional-turned-memoirist usually settles.

Indeed, throughout the book, Schaeffer is aware of what he is doing, and frequently comments on how a certain section is going, or the state of a sentence, while he is writing it. One section can spend the bulk of its time explaining or apologizing for what the last one did. This sounds coy, but it is done with such a light touch and a has such a giddily surreal quality that it never gets tiresome or stops being amusing. And it is more than that, as I figured out 40 or 50 pages in throughout the book, Schaeffer is pleading his case for its existence, as if he is arguing in court why this book should be written. I don't know if that was intentional or not, but it gives the whole book a certain recursive charm. It helps too that it is consistently funny.

I titled this "Hodgman for the Legal Set", because I think fans of one would enjoy the other. His "16 Types of Lawyers" has, intermixed with normal, assumed types, the Lawyer on the Run, who made some bad choices, and now is going to be killed. His advice columns feature questions that range from how to take your secretary out to lunch to what to do if your building is cursed. It is our world, but at an oblique angle, where there is a wealth of strangeness and even sadness behind the expensive suits and crushing workloads and sacrificed personal lives.

I think that oblique angle allows Schaeffer to get into what is important to him without being pedantic the nobility of the profession in theory and in practice. He has scorn for those who abuse the law, who treat it as a game, who use litigation tactics as a way to avoid the truth. It is never heavy-handed, but there is an anger there. His blog reflects an eclectic taste, and it is that kind of learning which, I think, lets him see that there is a purity to the law, that it exists as an ideal, unto itself, and not just a tool.

That's a long way for a book that is, at its heart, wildly funny. The reader is drawn through verbal mazes one step behind a winking guide. For a book that ostensibly teaches you what you need to know about dealing with lawyers, Schaeffer proves that the practice is as weird, unpredictable, and as idiosyncratic as the human race.
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