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| 1. The Five Thousand Year Leap: 30 Year Anniversary Edition with Glenn Beck Foreword by W. Cleon Skousen | |
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list price: $19.95 -- our price: $11.96 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0981559662 Publisher: American Documents / PowerThink Publishing Sales Rank: 191 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review This is the ONLY edition authorized and commissioned by the W. Cleon Skousen Family. Also, no other edition except this one includes the revisions made by the author during the 25 years after the original printing. NEW in 2009! THE 5000 YEAR LEAP 30 Year Anniversary Edition with Glenn Beck s Foreword! NOW also includes Common Sense by Thomas Paine No other edition offers the revisions and updates of this remarkable book detailing how the Founding Fathers used 28 principles to create a 5000 year leap in freedom, prosperity, and progress; all based upon morality, faith, and ethics. THIS BONUS EDITION INCLUDES: Common Sense by Thomas Paine, 101 Constitutional Questions To Ask Candidates, The US Constitution, The Declaration of Independence, and Two landmark addresses by author Dr. W. Cleon Skousen never before offered in print. Revised, 30 Year Anniversary Edition. During the last 26 years of Dr. Skousen's life he continued his extensive study of the constitution and founding values. He kept his original copy of The Five Thousand Year Leap with him and would write notes in the margins and on envelops and note cards of the refinements and updates he wished to add to the book. This new 30 Year Anniversary Edition includes those refinements and updates. Our gratitude goes out to the Skousen family for supplying us with this information to enable us to bring you this new edition. The 5000 Year Leap will take you by the hand as you discover the ideals of the Founding Fathers and their 28 principles for success. The values explored in detail by Dr. Skousen range from the Founder's prerequisite that the Constitution was designed for a moral people, to a government empowered by the people with checks and balances, along with an understanding of the critical nature of fiscal responsibility and family values. This book sums up the secrets to what James Madison called a miracle. Reviews
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| 2. The Book of Good Manners; a Guide to Polite Usage for All Social Functions by Walter Cox Green | |
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| 3. Scorpions: The Battles and Triumphs of FDR's Great Supreme Court Justices by Noah Feldman | |
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(2010-11-08)
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| 4. Making Our Democracy Work: A Judge's View by Stephen Breyer | |
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| 5. The Law by Frederic Bastiat | |
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Best three dollars ever spent. Ron Steele Moab, Utah
Written in 1850, just two years after the French Revolution of 1848, the Law is part treatise and part polemic, an appeal to the French people reminding them of the proper sphere of the law and government and begging them to turn away from their descent into socialism. The Law is also a summary of much of what Bastiat considered to be important from his own work; at the time The Law was written he was very sick, and he would be dead within a year of its publication. As a French patriot, Bastiat was deeply moved by the disintegration he saw in French society. As the last vestiges of the class-society were replaced and the new "democratic" order was being instituted, the State was more and more being used as a means by which groups of citizens (special interests) could plunder one another through taxes, transfer payments, tariffs, etc, committing what Bastiat calls "legal plunder." As he saw it, the law was being perverted into a so-called "creative" entity, through which controlling groups would seek to enforce their particular agendas at the expense and through the pocketbooks of the people in general. Bastiat argues that the law should be properly viewed as the formal embodiment of Force. That is, human laws should be the organized and formal construction of justice. Just law, he says, is nothing more than the organization of the human right to self-defense. This is a surprisingly narrow definition, perhaps almost too narrow to be truly useful. But I can imagine that Bastiat wouldn't have seen much moral value in the philosophy of pragmatism; he certainly would have made a bad present-day politician, a "flaw" which I find highly admirable. Bastiat is revered by many modern libertarians as one of the founding fathers of their ideology, and rightly so. But it seems to me that his work is more accurately anarcho-capitalist than libertarian. To say that Bastiat is arguing for "limited" government is a gross understatement. In fact, Bastiat seems instead to be arguing for the abolition of most all of what today we would call The Government. Many libertarians, for example, probably wouldn't argue the abolition of all forms of taxation on moral grounds. Personally I appreciate his definition of plunder as "...tariffs, protection, benefits, subsidies, encouragements, progressive taxation, public schools, guaranteed jobs, guaranteed profits, minimum wages, a right to relief, a right to the tools of labor, free credit, and so on, and so on..." Obviously although Bastiat may not share the views of modern libertarians in every respect, they have much to respect in him. And of course, the average economic and social liberal won't care for him at all, as he makes a special point of going after the vast majority of liberal sacred cows. But more surprisingly, the Religious Right should be wary of taking Bastiat on as too great of an ally. Although Bastiat and his book have been instrumental in forming many right-wing/libertarian ideas about free markets and the proper role of government, Bastiat argues forcefully against the use of the law as a tool for the shaping of moral values. Jerry Falwell and Bastiat are notably out of step with one another. I can imagine that Bastiat would not have much use for the Congressional institution of days of prayer, or for teacher-led prayer in the public schools he so despised, for anti-drug and pro-abstinence programs, or for the ministerial functions that many politicians have sought to usurp. Conservatives have an unfortunate habit of revering political figures. But as Bastiat says, "There are too many 'great' men in the world--legislators, organizers, do-gooders, leaders of the people, fathers of nations, and so on, and so on. Too many persons place themselves above mankind; they make a career of organizing it, patronizing it, and ruling it." Bastiat didn't believe in the inherent value of rulers of men. Many conservatives hope that their sons will grow up to be leaders in a political sense. Bastiat believed that we would be better served if more people sought to be useful, productive, inventive and moral, instead of trying to lead all the rest of society. Society will function much more desirably when we relinquish the desire for power over our fellow men, and instead seek power over our own actions. Although Bastiat's views on law and government may be too simplistic and dated to be implemented literally in a modern society, I believe that there is still much instruction to be had from this book. I would highly recommend it to anyone interested in developing an understanding of the roots of modern libertarian thought.
Bastiat manages to describe the purpose of "law," from a religious standpoint, in the first 3-4 pages. The rest of the book is mostly specific details of how his description of the proper purpose of the law has been thwarted in France in 1850. Many of the same principals apply today. For three bucks and an hour of your time, this book is guaranteed to engage you and make you think. In my experience, its ability to persuade people is uncanny.
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| 6. Original Intent: The Courts, the Constitution, & Religion by David Barton | |
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| 7. Property, 7th Edition by Jesse Dukeminier, James Krier, Gregory Alexander, Michael Schill | |
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| 8. The Killer of Little Shepherds: A True Crime Story and the Birth of Forensic Science by Douglas Starr | |
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Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) From 1894 until 1897, the quiet French countryside became the hunting ground of Joseph Vacher, a murderous psychopath known as "The Killer of Little Shepherds" who, like Ted Bundy a century later, would begin his life's work after being rejected by the woman with whom he was obsessed. Author Douglas Starr has written a riveting book of enormous scope, masterfully detailing both Vacher's case and the concurrent first "golden age of forensic discovery." He focuses primarily on Dr. Alexandre Lacassagne, France's leading expert in the field of legal medicine and professor at the University of Lyon, who played a crucial role in bringing Vacher to justice, and who mentored and inspired countless other scientists and students to pursue a wide variety of disciplines in the burgeoning field of forensics. Many important investigative techniques emerged during this time--the use of body measurements to identify and track captured criminals and suspects, the identification of bullets through the unique rifling marks made by individual firearms, the microscopic examination of hairs, fibers, and blood types, the analysis of wound and blood-spatter patterns--all of which form the basis of modern forensics. In addition to such purely scientific advances, the nature, cause, and appropriate treatment of insane persons in general and insane criminals in particular was being passionately debated all over Europe and in the United States. What to do about, and with, a violent offender who was deemed insane was at the forefront of jurisprudence, as was the question of what determines legal insanity--the court's answer to which would ultimately decide Vacher's fate. In alternating chapters, Mr. Starr reveals the life histories of his two main protagonists, illuminating the horrific crimes of the one and the crime-solving genius of the other, until Vacher is caught and the two men's careers intersect, impacting the lives of both.
This comprehensive, elegantly written book covers not just Vacher's crimes, but other interesting cases which challenged the expertise, talent, and instincts of Laccasagne. It sets the scene with plenty of background, from the explosion of crime rates in France (and elsewhere in Europe) as Industrial Revolution technologies displaced laborers, creating a wave of vagabonds who migrated from one area to another in search of work and charity, to the difficulties created by the lack of an organized rural police force to meet the challenges of this onslaught of "undesirables." As rural France tried to cope with these huge numbers of "wild men," those who tended to criminality often evaded capture or prosecution--Vacher was able to evade detection for three years, despite often daily interaction with the citizenry. During those years he walked nearly from one end of France to the other, killing as he went. Rural doctors, too, were fighting an uphill battle--often inadequately educated and working in conditions that made even a high degree of competence moot, the probability of getting reliable information about the state of a body from either the crime scene or the postmortem was regularly compromised. In an attempt to combat this problem Lacassagne prepared and distributed a step-by-step protocol for forensic autopsy, but the ability to follow these steps was often destroyed by those very conditions his protocol was meant to counteract (one important autopsy done on one of Vacher's victims was performed at night, by lamplight, in the middle of a misty field). Mr. Starr traveled to the remote areas where Vacher's crimes were committed, saw many of the exhibits he describes, spoke with descendants of Dr. Lacassagne, and observed many, rather grim, forensic autopsies. His prose is so rich with detail that the reader is immersed in the experiences of the protagonists--this is not a book researched from the author's computer or armchair. There are many interesting sidebars, including an amusing debate about a skull allegedly belonging to guillotined assassin Charlotte Corday and the significance of its physical characteristics, as well as a lively discussion by the scientists of the day about the methods of the fictional, and wildly popular detective, Sherlock Holmes. A detailed description of of Lacassagne's Criminal Museum is illuminated by several pages of photos and drawings of its exhibits, and pages from the newly emerging penny press (the start of the "yellow journalism" that continues to wreak havoc with investigations and trials today) are reproduced. All of this attention to the mise-en-sc�ne in which Laccasagne and his colleagues worked brings events, as well as time and place, vividly to life. Throughout, Mr. Starr evinces real feeling for his subjects, even the violent and self-aggrandizing Vacher. This is a book filled with strongly drawn characters--criminals and investigators alike--whom Mr. Starr never forgets were real people, especially those whom Vacher killed. In many such accounts the victims of such violent deaths remain mere ciphers, but in "The Killer of Little Shepherds," those little shepherds are clothed in real flesh, and their dignity remains intact.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) The Killer of Little Shepherds is a very engaging blend of early forensics methodology and the story of one of the worst serial killers in history. Although admitting to eleven gruesome and grisly murders, nearly twenty-five murders were attributed to Joseph Vacher of France. The governmental establishment, due to idiosyncrasies and communication breakdowns, allowed Vacher to be released from an asylum and even from a jail cell because they had no idea who (or maybe what) they had captured. Vacher thanked God (as he believed that God was watching over him) and went out and killed again and again.
Douglas Starr nicely mixes in the advances in the field of forensics (called Criminal Anthropology at the time) as it pertained to the investigation of Joseph Vacher and other murderers at that time. Doctor Alexandre Lacassangne was Vacher's arch enemy and continued to advance forensics from a police department of bullies beating and torturing their captives into a confession to a more scientific based discovery. There are explanations and examples of how the police would accuse a suspect of a crime with absolutely no evidence at all. Dr. Lacassagne's efforts were to find the scientific methods that would allow a non-emotional examination of the facts leading to a suspect. The case of Joseph Vacher was Dr. Lacassagne's showcase. I was impressed with the author's ability to carry the story of Vacher as he interwove the science and psychological breakthroughs in that era. It was amazing to learn about the French leaders in forensic science. This book brings a look at just how many stellar performers in that era were French. The last sections of the book concentrate on the discussion of when a person is actually responsible for his/her actions - criminally insane. Joseph Vacher insisted that he was insane and that he was not responsible for his crimes. Again, the Vacher case was perfect for this discussion and Starr presents the case without any agenda. I would definitely recommend this book to anyone that is interested in history of forensic science and how it related to one of the greatest trials of one of the worst serial killers of all time. Starr is extremely well researched and writes with absolutely no preconceived conclusions or any agenda. The concepts in this book are controversial (death penalty, criminally insane, preconditioned criminal dispositions, etc.) and were handled with expert skill.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) Set in 1890s France, The Killer of Little Shepherds contains two simultaneously-told stories. First, there's the account of Joseph Vacher, who roamed the countryside of France and left only gruesome death in his wake. The second story is that of Alexandre Lacassagne, head of the department of legal medicine at the University of Lyon, who pioneered many forensic techniques in the areas of crime-scene and post-mortem analysis, and was what we would now call a criminal profiler.
Starr begins his story with army Sergeant Joseph Vacher's full-on obsession with a young woman named Louise Barant, a housemaid. After only one dinner, Vacher proposed marriage, and then later told her that if she ever betrayed him, he would kill her. She tried to avoid him and put up every reasonable excuse for not seeing him, but it didn't help. On a four-month leave from the army, Vacher came after her, she refused him, and he shot both Louise and himself. Both survived, and Vacher was put into two different asylums for a total of ten months, then released. With really nowhere to go, Vacher became a vagabond. As he wandered the countryside, he committed the most heinous crimes, with young shepherd boys and young women favorite targets. Because he would wander from department to department, by the time the crimes were discovered, he would have been long gone, thus avoiding detection. Starr then interweaves his account of Vacher with the story of Alexandre Lacassagne, who was a pioneer in the study of forensic methodologies, including criminal profiling. He also discusses others in the field of criminology including Alphonse Bertillon and Cesare Lombroso, and explains developments in science and psychology that aided in the advancements of legal medicine and crime detection. He also examines the phenomenon of "vagabondage," noting the correlation between unemployment, the increase of people on the move, and the correlating upswing in crime. Both strands of this book come together when Vacher is caught, imprisoned, and sent to trial, leading to some pretty major questions. For example, was Vacher insane at the time he killed, or was he perfectly rational? And what exactly legally constituted insanity? Is there any way to know if insanity is based on physical causes? What type of punishment is suitable if a murderer is found to be insane? Many of these questions sparked international debates, but they also led to further developments in the field of psychology, which was growing rapidly, as was the gap between medical science and legal codes. And when a person is known to be a "monster," even if he is insane, how can the legal system justify putting him in an asylum where, if he's crafty enough, he'd fake being well and be let out to kill all over again? Starr expertly catches the era surrounding the crimes of Vacher and the work of Lacassagne and others. He acknowledges work being done in other countries around the same time period, such as Italy, the United States and Great Britain so as to broaden the scope of developments in the science of criminology. He also examines other crimes as well as the limitations of the local rural police departments in the capture of criminals. I got very caught up in Vacher's story, and I liked the book. The early efforts focused on forensics and criminal profiling are really interesting, and if you're into this kind of thing, you'll be rewarded. It's quite obvious that Starr contributed immense amounts of original research to the production of this work. The stories of Vacher's victims are also lurid enough so that if you're not interested in the field of forensic study, you'll still find something in the book that will interest you. I do think he could have done without the "postscript" chapter and gone right to the epilogue, but that's nit picky on my part. Overall, it's a good book that will keep you reading.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) After I read this book I thought, the more things change the more they remain the same. We are fascinated with serial killers today, and we were fascinated with them over 100 years ago when Joseph Vacher went walkabout thru the lovely and idyllic French countryside. Mr. Starr covers all the angles.....newspapers tripping over themselves to sensationalize the circulation-boosting story; courtroom outbursts and shenanigans by the defendant; the ineptness of the local police; fear and false accusations before the actual killer was caught; the birth of modern forensics and the infighting between scientists who had different philosophies (the old nature vs. nurture debate). The author doesn't miss a trick, and the book is beautifully written. Not dry but not sensational, either. You'll notice that I put the word disturbing in my title line. This book is disturbing on many levels. It is scary that Joseph Vacher could walk from place to place and get away with so many murders. Your first thought is, well, this WAS over 100 years ago. But then you stop and think about modern serial killers who also go unnoticed and unapprehended for years and years. It is also scary that a fellow human being could be this disturbed. Vacher didn't just kill people. He mutilated them and sexually abused them as well. If we could write him off as "just a nut" I suppose it wouldn't seem so bad. But Mr. Starr quotes extensively from Vacher's poems and letters and he was clearly a sensitive, observant and intelligent man. Sometimes. He was also most probably psychopathic and schizophrenic, wildly unpredictable, devious and manipulative. He was "crazy" but was also aware that he was doing "wrong" and he tried to cover his tracks. That's why he was held legally responsible for his actions. But as Mr. Starr points out, if a person can't control their urges even when they know those urges are wrong, should they be treated as criminals or should they be treated as mentally ill? It was a difficult question 100 years ago and it is a difficult question today. Whatever your views on the subject, I urge you to read this excellent, thought-provoking book.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) Between 1894 and 1897, vagabond Joseph Vacher drifted through the high country of France, murdering young village women and young shepherd boys as he travelled. His crimes fit a pattern: the victims were attacked in isolation along roads, their throats were slit, their bodies were horribly mutilated, and their corpses were hidden under nearby bushes or rocks. After each murder, Vacher simply walked away, avoiding arrest because local police jurisdictions (departements) had not learned to share information about horrific local crimes.
This is mostly a true crime account of Vacher's atrocities, with some history of forensic science thrown in. There is much biographical information about serial killer Vacher, criminologist Dr. Alexandre Lacassagne (who provided medical testimony at Vacher's trial), and prosecutor Emile Forquet (who finally arrested Vacher after collecting information about the crimes from multiple departements). The forensic science background discusses (1) Lacassagne's guidelines for detailed autopsies to determine causes of death; (2) Alphonse Bertillon's system for identification of criminals through measurements of body parts (a system that was used before the development of identification through fingerprints); (3) Cesare Lombroso's theory for identification of "born criminals" by skull shapes and other bodily features (a theory now thoroughly disproved); and (4) scientific attempts to understand and determine physical causes of criminal behavior through dissection of brains of well-known criminals (e.g., Vacher) and intellectuals (e.g., Paul Broca). For me, the most interesting chapters were the ones that recounted details of Vacher's trial. (A "bench" trial, not a jury trial, because the French legal system differs from the British/American system.) Vacher raised an unsuccessful insanity defense, claiming that he had been prematurely released from an insane asylum, and that his crimes occurred during rages provoked by a bullet lodged above his ear. The persuasive medical testimony regarding Vacher's sanity, presented by Lacassagne and other scientists, carried the day. There is also some intriguing discussion of the advantages of using the guillotine as a form of humane execution, especially as compared to early executions by electrocution.This book rates 3.5 stars, rounded up to 4 stars because of the scholarship, even though it is somewhat repetitious, and slow-moving at times.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) This was a book I wasn't expecting much from. I've found books of this type are usually quite dull - but not "The Killer Of Little Shepherds". I was involved from start to finish, and you probably will be as well. Recommended.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) On December 31, 1898, in the town of Bourg-en-Bresse, France, 3,500 spectators watched a guillotine separate mass murderer Joseph Vacher from his head. 29 years old, Vacher had been tried and convicted of only one of eleven brutal murders to which he confessed, but there were probably another 14 also committed by him across France between 1894 and 1897.
The youngest of 15 children, Vacher led a troubled childhood, with early indicators of a tendency to pointless violence. He was notably devout throughout his life. At age 15 Vacher even offered himself for membership to the Catholic Marist Congregation in its famous house at Saint-Genis-Laval. After probation, his superiors judged him unsuitable. He joined the army, became a sergeant, noted for his violent temper. Over ten months not long before his serial killing spree, he was in and out of two insane asylums for the attempted murder of a girlfriend and for his own attempted suicide. He was officially judged cured, no danger to society, and released. Toward the end of his killing spree, Joseph Vacher made a sort of religious pilgrimage to Lourdes and consistently attributed his frequent escapes after murders or attempted murders to direct protection by God. An autopsy showed evidence of venereal disease. Although a rapist, Joseph Vacher was sexually sterile (Ch.21). His face was hideously disfigured from a self-inflicted gunshot and he himself easily recognizable. Vacher nonetheless eluded capture for three years. His attacks on "little shepherds," on girls, boys, grown women and others less strong than himself showed evidence of planning, though no obvious motivation. Vacher himself claimed in prison and during his trial to be mad and in the grip of uncontrollable passion. He expected his jury to find him mad, not guilty of murder, and to return him to an asylum until cured for a third time. He lost. The case study of Joseph Vacher is convincingly embedded by Boston University Journalism Professor Douglas Starr in the great worldwide forensic science advances of the second half of the 19th Century. Vacher was hunted down by French magistrate �mile Fourquet, a serious student of the new forensic science. Vacher's culpability for his crimes and his feigning of madness was demonstrated at his trial by Dr. Alexandre Lacassagne, chair of the department of legal medicine at Lyon University. Lacassagne, along with Italy's Cesare Lombroso, led the most influential teams of doctors and scientists in Europe pioneering such fields as criminal psychology, forensic dissection, crime scene investigation and techniques for turning evidence into psychological profiles of killers and other criminals. These scientists and medical men all read Arthur Conan Doyle's novels of Sherlock Holmes. Their journals seriously criticized Holmes for not performing autopsies, for being a lone wolf rather than a team player and debated whether Holmes's methods were deductive or inductive. THE KILLER OF LITTLE SHEPHERDS is an elegantly written and vividly illustrated (16 pages of photographs) study of the world of vagabond serial killer Joseph Vacher and the mind-sets of the pioneers of that emerging forensic science that ran Vacher down and convicted him of murder. The book abounds in detail of the advances in using body parts to identify corpses. Thus, Bostonian Paul Revere, a dentist as well as silversmith and heroic rider of 1775, had identified the long buried body of a friend through an artificial tooth which Revere had implanted. The notes and bibliography of THE KILLER OF LITTLE SHEPHERDS are comprehensive and up to the moment. The book showcases contemporary debates about why some men become criminals, while most do not. Cesare Lambroso and the Italian School argued that predisposition to crime is genetic, innate. People are born murderers, rapists, pickpockets, etc. Alexandre Lacassagne and the French school of forensic medicine, by contrast, were not so sure, not so deterministic. At some level even criminals, including troubled souls like Joseph Vacher, retained free will and access to conscience. Their crimes had to be understood and their guilt mitigated by analysis of their upbringing, education, poverty, disappointments in love, the season of the year when a crime was committed and other societal and environmental factors. All of Europe's great crime theorists agreed, however, on two points: --people regularly lied, -- but on-the-spot evidence never lied. Even tattoos were seen by Lacassagne as "speaking scars." It is probably no coincidence that the model of teamwork among professionals, "The International Criminal Police Organization - INTERPOL," is today headquartered in Lyon, France. Suspect Vacher was brought to the Saint-Paul Prison in Lyon for interrogation. For decades Professor Lacassagne and his students and colleagues made the Univerity of Lyon the driving international power and unifying force in forensic medicine, crime scene investigation and related fields such as criminal anthropology and sociology. Coincidentally, I read THE KILLER OF LITTLE SHEPHERDS in September 2010 while cruising with a tour group on the Rhone and Saone rivers. Our 44-passenger boat, the MS Chardonnay, docked for two nights in Lyon. And my wife and I walked through streets along which Professor Lacassagne took his vigorous daily strolls. "On February 14, 1924, at the age of eighty-one, he left for his usual morning walk. He was approaching one of the bridges over the river when a car careened around the corner and struck him. ... (Lacassagne finally succumbed) on September 24" (Postscript). May Alexandre Lacassagne rest in peace and undying honor! Think of Lyon on the Rhone River as the Athens, the Vatican, the Jerusalem or the Mecca of modern, scientific police teamwork and of rational understanding of criminality. Historic Lyon is a proper home for INTERPOL. -OOO-
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) Douglas Starr's THE KILLER OF LITTLE SHEPHERDS is a gripping, fast-paced, thorough account of the advent of modern forensic science. The book compares the career of Joseph Vacher, one of history's more brutal (and successful) serial killers, with that of Dr. Alexandre Lacassagne, the leading criminologist of the time. Simultaneously chronicling Vacher's crime-spree (covering over six hundred miles, several years, and numerous victims) with Lacassagne's methodology and progression through science, Starr paints a portrait of the era that is as bloody as it is enthralling.
Perhaps central to the book--its backbone--is the corruption of the era; in the rural French countryside (as elsewhere in Europe and America), criminals were convicted and executed as much on rumor as on solid evidence. This was how Vacher was able to evade capture for so long; and it is the heart of Starr's book, which suggests that we must pay attention to the details, and we must always--as Lacassagne was wont to say--doubt our convictions. A portrait of criminal science as well as criminal pathology, THE KILLER OF LITTLE SHEPHERDS is a pleasing, concise, well-researched foray into one of the turning shifts in criminology. Starr's style will appeal to both the forensics enthusiast as well as the casual reader, especially those interested in historical true crime.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) In the mold of true crime book that simultaneously tells another story unraveling in history, Douglas Star offers "The Killer of Little Shepards". It is not quite "The Devil in the White City" in its scope, but it still an impressive work.
For the most hardened fan of true crime, Starr brings Alexandre Lacassagne to the forefront. Among the father ofs forensic medical science, he was a man ahead of his time. Rivaled by those that saw crime as having biological origins similar to those based in eugenics, Lacassagne was a keen observer who marvel those of his time with his observations and the techniques he developed. Particularly impressive is the story of his successful identification of a corpse four months after death with the limitations of his time. Josepher Vacher is the parallel tale. It would seem simple to have incarcerated him permanently after he took the role of scorned lover to an extreme. But in this era, domestic disputes were viewed in a different light. The one sense of frustration that I had with the book was aligning the title with the story itself. It is not until a good portion of the book is passed that the author makes a connection. As with many modern works of true crime, it is easy to look at the events and believe the killer should have been stopped sooner. But in the present moment, the situation is not as plain. Vacher should have been caught on more than one occasion, but slithered out of trouble. "The Killer of Little Shepards" is a well researched and well written work that moves like a novel. For many, it will prove to be teacher of forensic science. It is a worthy reflection on a more primitive time of criminal investigation.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) THE KILLER OF LITTLE SHEPHERDS is receiving huge critical acclaim and it is very much deserved. Author Douglas Starr does what seems the impossible here. I am a huge fan of true crime when it is written well and with a purpose. I don't go for stories that are written just for the gore or sensationalism. We all know that murderers and serials killers exist in society and it is the workings of their mind and their mortivation that intrigues me. Forensic science is a huge part of solving crimes and establishing the who, what, when where and why. Shows like CSI make it all look a little too easy. This is a true science and here Starr provides us with the history of its beginning. We need to go way back to the late 1800s to do this. One of the most famed serial killers and earliest in history to be so well documented is frenchman Joseph Vacher. Through his crimes he is believed to have raped, killed and also mutilated at least 25 people. We are then introduced to the brave man criminologist Alexandre Lacassagne. I am dumfounded by how he took it upon himself to study and research thoroughly the crimes of this man thus beginning the actual science of forensics. This story provides all the historical presence and facts needed. It is very thoroughly researched asnd while providing the facts is so well written that it reads like a horror novel. There is some gore here but in all honesty it is necessary to get the full feel of the history that was taking place.
This book wiill appeal to fans of true crime but also to fans of history for this book is like a text book on the beginning of forensics. It is better than most true crime novels while providing so much more. The highest praise to Douglas Starr here. This book is a huge success and I highly recommend it. ... Read more | |
| 9. Nullification: How to Resist Federal Tyranny in the 21st Century by Thomas E. WoodsJr. | |
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| 10. Lies the Government Told You: Myth, Power, and Deception in American History by Andrew P. Napolitano | |
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Editorial Review What new crisis will the federal government manufacture in order to acquire more power over individuals? What new lies will it tell? Throughout our history, the federal government has lied to send our children off to war, lied to take our money, lied to steal our property, lied to gain our trust, and lied to enhance its power over us. Not only does the government lie to us, we lie to ourselves. We won't admit that each time we let the government get away with misleading us, we are allowing it to increase in size and power and decrease our personal liberty. In acquiescing to the government's continuous fraudulent behavior, we bear partial responsibility for the erosion of our individual liberties and the ever-expanding federal regulation of private behavior. This book attacks the culture in government that facilitates lying, and it challenges readers to recognize that culture, to confront it, and to be rid of it. Reviews
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| 11. Civil Procedure Examples & Explanations by Joseph W. Glannon | |
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Editorial Review Students and professors are united in their high regard for this text that helps make a difficult subject accessible: Reviews
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| 12. Constitutional Law: Principles And Policies (Introduction to Law Series) by Erwin Chemerinsky | |
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All con law students should be grateful that one of the nation's leading Constitutional practitioners and professors has written this book. Its size is intimidating, but that's because it covers far more territory than the typical intro con law class. It's so well-done, though, that it's something serious students and lawyers will want on their bookshelves long after the first year -- as a supplement for advanced-topics classes, and as an essential reference work. The book is well-organized in an outline format with headings and subheads, so you can easily follow the thread of complex doctrine over time, like the Commerce Clause, or across its varied applications, like Equal Protection. Chapters are thorough but well divided. The organization allows you to find exactly what you need and to zero in on a particular narrow point or case, or to read more expansively about a doctrine's development, change, and varied application. Chemerinsky's prose is neutral, straightforward, always clear. He's analytical but doesn't make arguments. You couldn't say his writing has personality, but it is quite readable.
Then I picked up this book by Chemerinksy, which recommended by our professor. It's /amazing/. We're working on the dormant commerce clause, and Chemerinsky sets out everything incredibly clearly, citing cases (rather than including the entire case itself) and setting out black letter law in an explanation of the Court's rulings. Everything is much easier to understand, and it's much easier to pick out the important issues in the textbook when I read the next assignment. I recommend reading Chemerinsky first, and the textbook second, so the rules pop out at you more readily.
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| 13. Constitutional Law by Chemerinsky | |
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Editorial Review Updated throughout, the revised Third Edition features
Nationally recognized as a foremost pedagogue and expert in the field, Erwin Chemerinsky does not disappoint with his Constitutional Law casebook. Take a look at the streamlined and updated Third Edition. If you aren't teaching with it already, this may be the year to switch. ... Read more Reviews
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| 14. 10 More Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests (Lsat Series) by Law School Admission Council | |
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Editorial Review Reviews
In preparing for the LSAT, I have used a wide variety of study guides--10 Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests, 10 More Actual Official PrepTests, Kaplan's LSAT 2004, Kaplan's LSAT 180, Princeton Review's Cracking the LSAT 2004, and REA's Best Test Prep. The only bad one among them was REA's; the rest were quite helpful. This book was the conerstone of my preparation. If you want to do well on the LSAT, this is the way to study: Your first two purchases should be Kaplan's (or Princeton's, if you prefer) most current LSAT guide and 10 More Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests. Kaplan's book will give you a good intro to the test, along with 3 full tests with a detailed analysis for each question. The PrepTest book will give you plenty of real, recently-administered LSATs to take, though without question analysis. Just getting used to taking the test is the most important part of the preparation process, and between the two books, 13 full tests should be plenty. If, after 4 or 5 tests, you're noticing your scores plateau around 165, and you want to bump them up, get Kaplan's LSAT 180. It is full of the toughest questions that Kaplan's crew could come up with (along with a few nasty ones you might see adapted from real questions on LSAC's PrepTests), and strategies on how to approach them. The regular, yearly guides are a great way to start studying, but they will only take you so far. LSAT 180 can take you the rest of the way, as its name implies. You should be warned beforehand though--these are THE TOUGHEST questions you will find anywhere. If you can handle these, most of the actual test will seem like cake. If you burn through all of Kaplan's Tests--including the free online one--and all 10 Actual tests (Like I did), you can always get the older 10 Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests. It's still good prep; the only difference is that the tests are older--December '92 is the oldest; September '95 is the most recent. Some minor things have changed: the older tests are a little harder, which means a lower raw score here translates into a higher scaled score; the wording of questions is different; and some of the types of logic games that are on the newer tests aren't on these. However, if you've taken all the tests in the more recent book, and you know what to expect to see on the actual test, taking the PrepTests in this book is a good way to keep your practice going. Also, both LSAC.org and Amazon have individual PrepTests available for $8 apiece. You can get all the most recent tests--sometimes right up to the one most recently administered. These aren't as good a deal as the books of 10, but seeing the most recent material--even if it's just 1 or 2 tests--is worth it. Though I haven't taken it, I've heard that PrepTest 31 (June 2000) has the most difficult Logic Game ever on it... that might be worth checking out. *****UPDATE***** I took PrepTest 31. The CD game was thoroughly underwhelming--I didn't even think it was the hardest game on the test. Maybe that's just me. Anyway, that's about it. If you want to prepare for the LSAT as thoroughly and effectively as possible, this is the way to do it.
If you want to do well on the LSAT, this is the way to study: Your first purchase should the 10 More Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests. The PrepTest book will give several of real LSATs to take, though without question analysis. All of the answers are given, but they are not explained. I find this to be a bonus, because I believe that a test taker can learn more from figuring out why the answer is what is, instead of just going by the problematical answers Kaplan gives. Kaplan's answers have a tendency to be too long and lack an accurate answer. It is similar to when a person is talking but they are not really saying anything. Just getting used to taking the test is the most important part of the preparation process. If you finish all ten tests, get the older 10 Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests. DO NOT buy Kaplan's LSAT 180. It is full of the toughest questions that KAPLAN could MAKE UP. These questions are so bogus that they lowered everyone in my study group's score: we all had scores over 170 before this book. On one page, Kaplan gave two complete different explanations for two questions that were the exact same type of question. Kaplan's answers to MADE UP questions are lacking judgment. Kaplan is simply too lazy to buy official questions. Also, both www.LSAC.org and Amazon have individual PrepTests available for $8 each. Get the latest tests: these aren't a good buy like the books of ten, but seeing the most up to date material - even if it's just 1 or 2 tests - is worth it. If you are not in a hurry, you can get the tests free of shipping from LSAC, and they have the MOST RECENT tests, while Amazon tends to lack the two most recent tests. Specifically, get the June 2000 (PrepTest 31) exam. This contains the notorious "CD Game," the second game, which is commonly considered the most complicated LSAT logic game ever. BUT... If you REALLY want to, go ahead and pay in the thousands for a LSAT class prep course, like those offered by Kaplan and Princeton Review. I do not suggest doing that, but confidence is essential for acing the LSAT. If you feel that taking an over-priced prep course will boast your self-assurance, feel free to do so.
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| 15. Wills, Trusts, and Estates, Eighth Edition by Jesse Dukeminier, Robert H. Sitkoff, James Lindgren | |
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Editorial Review Co-authors Robert Sitkoff and James Lindgren took great care to preserve the voice and spirit of Jesse Dukeminier, while fulfilling the trust and expectation among users for timely and relevant coverage, cases, and note material. Reviews
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| 16. Contracts Examples & Explanations by Brian A. Blum | |
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Editorial Review Important features of this highly regarded study aid include: New to the Fourth Edition: Reviews
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| 17. The Anti-Federalist Papers and the Constitutional Convention Debates (Signet Classics) | |
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The original intent of the Convention of States was to simply amend the Articles of Confederation, but instead it set out to frame an entirely new constitution. The Conventional debates began on May 29, 1787, in Philadelphia, with the "Virginia Plan" as the topic of the debates. This was James Madison's plan to strengthen the national government. However, not all our founding fathers wanted a centralized government. Statesmen such as Patrick Henry and John DeWitt argued for a decentralized government with a minimal central government. These men saw that the government as depicted in the Constitution would not represent the people adequately and that rights and liberties recently won from England would be lost. This book is a must-read for anyone who wants to learn about the political thought which shaped our Constitution.
However, I would not recommend this edition. The editor is clearly Federalist. For example, his bias can be found at the bottom of page 214, where he inserts the comment "[Here Mr. Henry strongly and pathetically expatiated on the probability of the President's enslaving America and the horrible consequences that must result.]" Strongly? Pathetically? Expatiated? These are pretty strong words, certainly not the words of an unbiased historian. The "Mr. Henry" he is referring to is Patrick Henry, one of our nation's greatest patriots. The comment is inserted in the middle of one of Patrick Henry's speeches. The editor's bias casts doubt on the analysis, comments, historical reference, and background information he has inserted throughout the book, ostensibly to provide a frame of reference for better understanding the actual documents. If the frame of reference is tilted, your understanding risks being tilted. Read the Anti-Federalist papers, by all means. But get an edition with no bias, or a bias in favor of the anti-federalist viewpoint.
To get a better knowledge of what was going on at that time in our history we need to read about what was really going on and how was the political climate. Reading the "Federalist Papers" will not give you a complete picture, a good start, yes, but the concept of a strong central government was looked upon as an infringement of individual and states rights. The constitutions ws looked upon, by some, as a threat. Thus, this volume, of dissenting opinions, is valuable to balance the thought process. Patrick Henry and John DeWitt are but two of these men who had a different concept of what a federal govenment should be, as James Madison and Alexander Hamilton. Madison was primary in the consept of compromise or composite, partly national is that some powers impinged directly on the people (taxing power) and partly national as the states acted as "units" of a central government. This early on would be the ground work for dual-sovereignty, but with carefully laid out laws. This book cross-references to the "Federalist Paper" making his an excellent book for the novice reader. Also, there are complete texts of the Anti-Federalist papers and Constitutional Convention Debates complete with commentaries and an Index of Ideas making the olume invaluable to anyone interested in political thought in action. As political independence required new mode of thinking, the United States became a hotbed of political thought about government. Thus, the next step was national indetity and to accomplish this they had to have a national government acting as one, a union and confederated government. As the debate flurished, giving rise to pamphlets, newspaper articles and other writings on questions of a representative government, eventually a quest for freer and more democratic government persisted. This book has quite a lot of informantion in it and along with other readings makes the reader better prepared to underdstand as to why things are as they are, with respect to the Constitution of the United States, the oldest still-in-use.
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| 18. Property Examples & Explanations, 3e by D. Barlow Burke, Joseph Snoe | |
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Editorial Review New to the Third Edition: With its focused coverage, concise format, and problem-based format, Property Examples and Explanations, Third Edition, continues to provide Property students with the help and confidence they need to master this difficult first-year course. Reviews
It's confusing. There is no natural progression in explanations. I felt like I was reading another confusing casebook with bad examples! Burke and Snoe need to take a look at how Glannon does it for Torts and Civil Procedure before they write the second edition.
Compared to the Examples & Explanations for Contracts (Blum), Torts (Glannon), and the astounding Civil Procedure (Glannon), this book was a big let-down. Either Aspen needs to have some student reviewers, or the editors at Aspen need to get their act together and compare what is in the book with a commercial outline. In our study group, we randomly turned to two examples & explanations. In one case, the authors said that they differed on the outcome, but only gave one authors opinion (Implied Warranty of Habitability, chp 20, example #10). In another (on Dower, Chp 14., example 1), the answer is flat-out wrong. I do like that the chapters are short, and not intimidating, but the explanations have to be beefed up and well-developed. They are not in this book, and I cannot recommend anyone purchase it. I'm not wasting any time using it in preparation for finals.
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| 19. The Conservative Assault on the Constitution by Erwin Chemerinsky | |
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Editorial Review As a result of political pressure from conservatives and a series of Supreme Court decisions, our public schools are increasingly separate and unequal, to the great disadvantage of poor and minority students. Right-wing politicians and justices are dismantling the wall separating church and state, allowing ever greater government support for religion. With the blessing of the Supreme Court, absurdly harsh sentences are being handed down to criminal defendants, such as life sentences for shoplifting and other petty offenses. Even in death penalty cases, defendants are being denied the right to competent counsel at trial, and as a result innocent people have been convicted and sentenced to death. Right-wing politicians complain that government is too big and intrusive while at the same time they are only too happy to insert the government into the most intimate aspects of the private lives of citizens when doing so conforms to conservative morality. Conservative activist judges say that the Constitution gives people an inherent right to own firearms but not to make their own medical decisions. In some states it is easier to buy an assault rifle than to obtain an abortion. Nowhere has the conservative assault on the Constitution been more visible or more successful than in redefining the role of the president. From Richard Nixon to George W. Bush, conservatives have sought to significantly increase presidential power. The result in recent years has been unprecedented abuses, including indefinite detentions, illegal surveillance, and torture of innocent people. Finally, access to the courts is being restricted by new rulings that deny legal protections to ordinary Americans. Fewer lawsuits alleging discrimination in employment are heard; fewer people are able to sue corporations or governments for injuries they have suffered; and even when these cases do go to trial, new restrictions limit damages that plaintiffs can collect. The first step in reclaiming the protections of the Constitution, says Chemerinsky, is to recognize that right-wing justices are imposing their personal prejudices, not making neutral decisions about the scope of the Constitution, as they claim, or following the "original meaning" of the Constitution. Only then do we stand a chance of reclaiming our constitutional liberties from a rigid ideological campaign that has transformed our courts and our laws. Only then can we return to a constitutional law that advances freedom and equality. Reviews
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| 20. Constitutional Law, 17th (University Casebook) by Kathleen M. Sullivan, Gerald Gunther | |
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