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Paperback Nothing But the Truth: Why Trial Lawyers Don't, Can't, and Shouldn't Have to Tell the Whole Truth Book

ISBN: 0814751741

ISBN13: 9780814751749

Nothing But the Truth: Why Trial Lawyers Don't, Can't, and Shouldn't Have to Tell the Whole Truth

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Lubet's Nothing But The Truth presents a novel and engaging analysis of the role of storytelling in trial advocacy. The best lawyers are storytellers, he explains, who take the raw and disjointed observations of witnesses and transform them into coherent and persuasive narratives.
Critics of the adversary system, of course, have little patience for storytelling, regarding trial lawyers as flimflam artists who use sly means and cunning rhetoric...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Enhanced my appreciation of the adversary system

Lubet's book was well written, entertaining and thought-provoking. As a non-lawyer, I have a deeper perspective on what attorneys do to tell their story. My purpose for reading this book was to approach storytelling for marketing from a perspective outside of typical business books. I got a few ideas, but not as much as I hoped. The book would have benefited from a summary chapter that would tie together the messages from each chapter. My guess is that the closer you are to the law, your return on the time spent with this book will increase.

Thoughtful, thought-provoking, with wide applicability

This is a wonderful and delightful book. It contains very enjoyable, digestible, especially well-written, insightful and highly instructive discussions of six real, or almost real or at least fabled or fancied, well-known "cases" from the vantage point and context of the formulation of "stories". These are developed in the context of trial preparation and presentation. The ever-present subtext is "truth," open-textured, informed by and very susceptible to strategy, bias and device. The development has far wider applicability beyond the strictly "legal," extending to all forms of persuasion. In addition to its very clear value in and relevance to the legal arena-at-large, including advocacy, this book will be of considerable interest to those practitioners of "theory", philosophy, ethics, language and communication, among other intellectual pursuits and disciplines. The introduction and concluding chapters encapsulate and position the text well. The astute, conscientious and imaginative reader will be amply rewarded with heightened insight into the role of story-telling as a perennial current pervading not only much of Anglo-American jurisprudence, but also everyday forms of human "intercourse", including "he said, she said" conversations, journalism and the media, fundraising, advertising, the pulpit and all forms of persuasive or advocatory writing and discourse.

Truth and Lawyers

Steven Lubet's new book presents seven entertaining and thought-provoking essays on how lawyers tell their clients' stories in trials. The book is bound to appeal to lawyers, but it deserves to be a hit among the general public too. It is admirably written -- concise, clear, fair-minded, free of legal jargon, and often funny. Lubet starts with "Bif and Me," inspired by an airport incident. A man angrily told Lubet that he had sat down in a seat the man was reserving for his father. Lubet prepared to move, but as the man continued his aggressive behavior, Lubet made the mistake of saying, "Hold on a minute, mister." The man said, "Don't piss me off" and shook his fist at him, whereupon Lubet skedaddled. Lubet imagines what would have happened if he had consulted a lawyer about suing "Biff" for assault, the legal term for a threat that puts someone in reasonable apprehension of imminent bodily harm. Lubet explains how his own lawyer would have framed the story, then shows how Biff's lawyer would have framed a very different story by picking and choosing from the same evidence. The result, says Lubet, would have been two competing stories, both of them legitimately grounded in the true facts of what happened, but emphasizing different subsets of those facts. The humor of "Biff and Me" abruptly gives way to the tragedy of the Mortaras, a Jewish family living in the Papal States. In 1853, a Christian domestic servant secretly sprinkled water on one-year-old Edgardo Mortara, uttered the phrases of baptism, and thereby under canon law rendered him a Christian. When they discovered this secret baptism, Vatican authorities raided the Mortaras' house, seized Edgardo, and permanently removed him from his parents' custody, since canon law forbade Christians to be raised by Jews. The parents hired lawyers to frame an appeal to the Pope under the canon law. The appeal failed, although the case stirred international outrage against the Church. Lubet adds a new dimension to this familiar story by focusing on how the law limits the freedom lawyers have in framing their clients' stories. While most people today regard the case as one of kidnapping, no lawyer in the Papal States in 1858 could have framed the story that way. The Mortaras'lawyers had to resort to technicalities challenging the validity of the baptism and other similarly hopeless tactics. "John Brown" raises troubling questions of whether lawyers may condone lying by their client in the name of an ultimately just cause. John Brown was tried by Virginia for sedition after his failed raid on Harpers Ferry. As in the Mortara case, the outcome was a foregone conclusion. Knowing this, Brown and his lawyers used the trial to present a story to the country at large about the heroic battle of a peaceloving man against the evils of slavery. The peaceloving part was false, and his lawyers knew it. They helped Brown suppress the truth about his real plans for the raid and ab

Truth Believer

I work in a large law office. All of my colleagues know that many of our most effective trial lawyers are the ones who tell the best stories. As Steven Lubet points out in his cleverly written book, this does not refer to creating a story out of thin air. Rather, it deals with presenting a case to a judge or jury in a way that best represents the client's true position. Through both fictional and real-life examples, the author discusses the inherent difficulties and potential problems a lawyer may have in presenting every single aspect of a client's background. After all, it's not the job of one side's lawyer to do the opposing lawyer's work. But when an attorney presents a truthful account of the client's position in a manner that the court or jury can clearly understand, the likelihood that a particular case may wind up with a just result increases. Lubet's examples include John Brown at Harper's Ferry, Wyatt Earp at the O.K. Corral and Atticus Finch in "To Kill a Mockingbird," -- great stories in themselves, memorable and instructive to lawyer and non-lawyer alike.
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