Buy anew versionof this Connected Casebook and receiveaccessto theonline e-book, practice questionsfrom your favorite study aids, and anoutline toolon CasebookConnect, the all in one learning solution... This description may be from another edition of this product.
If your professor chooses this textbook, you are LUCKY! It is wonderfully well-written in a clear and concise way with excellent explanations, relevant cases, and well organized hypotheticals, all working together to develop a thorough understanding of each concept. The reader will NOT walk away with a hazy understanding of contract law. So many legal textbooks are full of themselves with language so dense that reading them is like solving a puzzle. This book is a breath of fresh air.
Book arrived as described!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
Book arrrived as described and seller shipped quickly. Will do business with this seller again!
'Contracts' was a great buy
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
I got a book in great condition for 1/4 the price at my school's bookstore! I would definitely buy from this seller again.
This is my favorite casebook.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
I literally read this book cover to cover, and I certainly would not read any other textbook all the way through. The pages are thick and the typeface is large, so my eyes didn't hurt after squinting at a page. Many textbooks seem jumbled, but the concepts are neatly laid out in this edition. The opinions are edited well, without too much extraneous information. However, there's not a lot of information on the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) or any comparative contracts law. The authors do a good job gathering contracts cases from across the country and didn't succumb to the temptation to drown their readers in legalese. I also disagree with the previous reviewer. In fact, many law text editors purposely use the feminine pronoun (she/her) to be, in a sense, distracting. Most readers, both male and female, expect a masculine pronoun. A feminine pronoun in its place will require re-engagement by the reader and may (because of our cultural biases) "humanize" the subject. For a more detailed history of the use of masculine and feminine pronouns in legal writing, see Petersson, Gender Neutral Drafting: A Historical Perspective, 19 Statute Law Review 2, 93-112, available at [..] [..]
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