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      Dershowitz, Alan M. Listings

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      1 ABUSE EXCUSE
      Dershowitz, Alan M.
      1994 47986  According to renowned defense attorney and Harvard law professor Alan M. Dershowitz, "abuse excuses" are enabling people to get away with murder - literally. From the Menendez brothers to Lorena Bobbitt, more and more Americans accused of violent crimes are admitting to the charges, but arguing that they shouldn't be held legally responsible. The reason: they're victims - of an abusive parent, a violent spouse, a traumatic experience, ethnic hatred, society at large, or anything else - who struck back at a real or perceived oppressor. And they couldn't help themselves, they say. In this provocative and important collection of essays, Dershowitz reviews a wide range of recent cases - including those of O. J. Simpson, Tonya Harding, and Woody Allen - and argues that the current vogue in victim defenses is antithetical to the ideals of our constitutional democracy. For Dershowitz, the foundations of American society are individual responsibility and the rule of law. And people who claim to be above the law - whatever the excuse - are no more than vigilantes. Publishers Weekly More and more criminal defendants are claiming a history of abuse to avoid accountability for their behavior. Harvard Law School professor Dershowitz (Chutzpah) views battered wife syndrome, ``black rage,'' the ``crime of passion'' mitigation, sexual abuse syndrome and other defenses as ``abuse excuses.'' In his blistering critique, Dershowitz sees such ploys and jurors' sympathetic responses to them as an abdication of individual and societal responsibility. Despite the author's attempt to link these 68 articles and essays under the broad theme of denial of accountability, this is a miscellany of his feisty views on such defendants as Michael Jackson, Erik and Lyle Menendez, John Demjanjuk, Woody Allen and William Kennedy Smith, as well as Serbian genocide, U.S. feminists' anti-pornography campaigns and Germany's lax prosecution of Nazi war criminals. Dershowitz, a consultant to the O.J. Simpson defense team, intimates that Simpson might have to use some variation of the abuse excuse-a glaring irony that blunts his book's impact. (Oct.) Library Journal What do ``abused child,'' ``black rage,'' ``posttraumatic stress,'' and ``Super Bowl Sunday'' have in common? They are all reasons given by Americans seeking to avoid responsibility for alleged violent crimes. They are also the subject matter of an interesting series of essays by Dershowitz, professor at Harvard Law School and one of the most prominent of today's commentators on criminal law. The essays are brief (most only a few pages long), and each describes an actual case in which the excuse was raised as a defense. Dershowitz poses a truly interesting question: why do Americans remain sympathetic to the excuses offered by criminal defendants while at the same time demanding tougher criminal laws and punishment? He believes that we are genuinely concerned with victims and that this concern remains apparent even if the victim is also a criminal offender. For popular law collections.-Jerry E. Stephens, U.S. Court of Appeals Lib., Oklahoma City BookList Dershowitz, the ubiquitous Harvard attorney, comes out swinging against what he terms the abuse excuse, a legal tactic by which defendants claim a history of abuse as an excuse for violent retaliation. The strategy has been used with varying degrees of success by Lorena Bobbitt, Tonya Harding, and the Menendez brothers. In his introduction, Dershowitz lays out his thesis that the abuse excuse not only affects the legal system, but also is a symptom of society's willingness to abdicate responsibility. The abdicators, he contends, aren't just individuals but also include ethnic groups and even nations. Dershowitz makes a powerful case, listing over 40 "syndromes" that have been used as excuses for crime, including adopted child syndrome, black rage syndrome (used by the killer on the Long Island Railroad), Holocaust survivor syndrome, Super Bowl Sunday syndrome.

       Little, Brown & Company 0316181358 / 9780316181358
      Hardcover As New Condition Boston 

      Price: 11.96 USD

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      2 CHUTZPAH
      Dershowitz, Alan M.
      1992 52445 Publishers Weekly Gadfly civil libertarian Dershowitz pens a perspicacious, anecdotal account of the responsibilities and difficulties associated with Jewishness today. In hardcover, this BOMC alternate spent 22 weeks on PW 's bestseller list and attained the number-one position. Photos. Author tour. (May) Library Journal Leo Rosten, in his The Joys of Yiddish ( LJ 10/1/68), defines chutzpah as ``gall, brazen nerve, effrontery, incredible `guts,' presumption plus arrogance such as no other word and no other language can do justice to.'' Dershowitz ( Reversal of Fortune , LJ 4/1/86 ) , perhaps the most famous lawyer in the United States today, argues here that U.S. Jewry should shed its second-class citizenship syndrome and show a little chutzpah in defining its relationship with gentile, Christian America. He pleads that U.S. Jews have nothing to be ashamed of, since they have made vital contributions to the nation and deserve the same rights and privileges as their gentile compatriots. His thesis ranges through a spectrum of fascinating essays about anti-Semitism on college campuses, the state of Israel, the Holocaust, Auschwitz, the Jewish religion, and church/state relations. Brilliant, provocative, controversial, and as ``chutzpadik'' as its author, this book should have a wide audience and is enthusiastically recommended for public library collections. Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 1/91.-- Robert A. Silver, Shaker Heights P.L., Ohio What People Are Saying Saul Bellow Alan Dershowitz ['s] message to American Jews is that second class citizenship is intolerable. His mind is keen and quick and his argument is powerful. This is a courageous and important book. Annotation The acclaimed #1 New York Times bestseller, written by a brilliant legal mind, on what it means to be a Jew in America today. Dershowitz discusses the changes they've witnessed, changes they've created, and the changes that must still take place. He examines anti-Semitism, the Holocaust, assimilation, Zionism, civil rights, changes in eastern Europe, and turmoil in the Middle East. Serial rights to Los Angeles Times. 8-page photo insert. Simon & Schuster Trade 0-671-76089-0 / 9780671760892
      Soft Cover Very good Condition Old Tappan, New Jersey, U.S.A. out of Print 

      Price: 11.39 USD
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      3 JUST REVENGE : A NOVEL
      Dershowitz, Alan M.
      1999 7000805  Published at twenty eight dollars. In his first courtroom drama, The Advocate's Devil, Alan M. Dershowitz introduced us to defense attorney Abe Ringel as he represented a rapist.

      That book probed a controversial legal issue--what happens when a defender doubts his own client's innocence? In Dershowitz's second legal thriller--Abe (along with the whole judicial system) is confronted with a still bigger dilemma: Is a Holocaust survivor entitled to seek revenge on the perpetrator who butchered his family some 50 years earlier? Max Menuchen was just 18 years old when Captain Marcelus Prandus of the Lithuanian Auxiliary Militia forced his family (and dozens of other Jewish families) into the Ponary Woods in Vilna, Lithuania, making them dig their own graves. The young man could only watch as Prandus shot his pregnant wife, Leah, and baby boy, Efraium. Escaping a similar fate by "dumb luck," Max survived the bullet, but not the torment and guilt that would haunt him for decades. Then, in 1999, Max makes the chilling discovery that Prandus escaped any punishment and now lives in a small Massachusetts town, surrounded by a loving family. The world didn't care about what happened in the Ponary Woods. That was what was destroying Max. That was what drove him to the vengeance in which he was now engaged. Determined to make the former Nazi suffer, Max and an old acquaintance kidnap Prandus, tie him to a chair, and psychologically torture him. Prandus then commits suicide to escape his own "suffering." Max now stands accused of murder--and his old friend Abe Ringel must prove that the revenge was just, for the sake of the Menuchens and for all those who suffered at the hands of the Nazis. The legal mechanics of Max's trial are hardly exceptional (author Dershowitz has a tendency to slip back into his other role as Harvard law professor, and we sometimes feel more like students than readers). However, the moral implications of such a controversial trial make Just Revenge a compelling, and ultimately thought-provoking, read. --Naomi Gesinger Product Description: One of the foremost courtroom lawyers of his generation, Alan M. Dershowitz takes controversial stands based on the principle of equal justice for all. Along the way, he has authored the #1 New York Times bestseller Chutzpah; the bestselling account of the Claus von Bulow case Reversal of Fortune; and the bestselling courtroom drama The Advocate's Devil. Now Dershowitz has written a novel that is at once personal, passionate, and towering: an explosive legal thriller that pits Dershowitz's literary alter ego, attorney Abe Ringel, against the worst crime of the twentieth century-the Holocaust. What if you witnessed the most abominable deeds that human beings can inflict upon each other? What if you came face-to-face with the very man who had slaughtered your family before your eyes? That is the question confronted by a celebrated professor named Max Menuchen. Max has found the man who had killed his entire family in cold blood more than a half century before. Max, who has never before broken a law, cannot turn down his chance for revenge. In 1943 Marcellus Prandus was a Lithuanian militia captain who carried out the bloodthirsty orders of his Nazi commanders during World War II.

      Today he is an old man living outside Boston. For Max, who has discovered Prandus's identity by chance, killing him is not enough, because Prandus is already dying of cancer. How can Max make Prandus suffer exactly as Max himself did? Can Max bring himself to assassinate Prandus's children and grandchildren and make the old man watch his family die, as Max himself was forced to do? By the time defense attorney Abe Ringel enters the case, Max has carried out an astounding act of revenge, and America's great Holocaust trial has begun: an explosive legal and moral struggle to find the light of justice within the darkness of human evil. With Max facing almost certain conviction, Ringel desperately tries to prove his actions were justified. But this blockbuster trial is careening in a direction not even Abe can predict,

       Warner Books, Inc 0-446-51983-9 / 9780446519830
      Hardcover As New Condition New York, NY out of Print 

      Price: 11.27 USD

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      4 SHOUTING FIRE: CIVIL LIBERTIES IN A TURBULENT AGE
      Dershowitz, Alan M.
      2002 8396  The 20th century was not a good one for civil rights. During this time the world witnessed some of the grossest crimes against humanity, from Stalin's mass murders to the Holocaust to the recent genocidal killings in Rwanda.

      In his erudite Shouting Fire, Harvard Law School professor and noted appellate attorney Alan Dershowitz claims that while these injustices were costly and unforgivable, they actually helped to define the parameters of rights today. In contrast to many other legal scholars, Dershowitz eschews the idea that rights are a "natural" or God-given endowment. Rather, he argues that trial-and-error and watchful advocacy are the wellspring for our rights. Shouting Fire develops this theory in piecemeal fashion, beginning with the U.S. Bill of Rights -- which he calls our "insurance policy against tyranny" -- and moving into an examination of hotly contested civil liberties issues, from euthanasia to free speech. Not surprisingly, Dershowitz has often participated in these debates on the highest level as either attorney or scholar, and he brings keen insights to bear on their nature. Since many of the articles comprising the book have appeared in print elsewhere, following Dershowitz from one topic to the next involves a significant amount of zigzagging. Thus, Shouting Fire better resembles a meditation on rights for the curious and hungry, rather than a cohesive argument. Still, whether one is interested in organ donation or the visitation rights of grandparents, Shouting Fire delivers with eloquence and, as always, provocative flair. (John Freeman) John Freeman lives in New York City. FROM THE PUBLISHER Alan Dershowitz has been involved with so many high-profile cases, and has written persuasively about so many issues, that it is sometimes hard to remember that he is at heart a legal scholar. He was the youngest professor ever to be given tenure at Harvard Law School. For decades he has been a champion of civil liberties, often at the forefront of the most important legal debates and trials of his time. With Shouting Fire, Dershowitz returns to what he knows best and cares about most: rights-human rights, civil rights, and constitutional rights. In the introduction to this readable and accessible book, he poses the intriguing question, Where do rights come from? Rejecting the traditional answers-God, nature, and positive law-Dershowitz offers a new and wholly original source of and justification for rights. He shows how rights come from wrongs, how our long experience with human injustice provides the essential building blocks for a theory of justice and rights. He then illustrates and amplifies his approach with a personal selection of his best and most provocative writings on rights and justice. Shouting Fire covers a vast spectrum of civil liberties issues-everything from the right to choice to the separation between church and state to the Holocaust and its long shadows. The essays included here summarize Dershowitz's life's work, encapsulating nearly forty years' worth of pioneering rights battles. But also here, for the first time, is Dershowitz's surprising and brilliantly creative philosophy of rights, an innovative approach developed over the course of his career. Dershowitz summons the lessons of a lifetime in law in weaving together a theory of civil liberties perfectly attuned to the complex issues of our constantly evolving democracy. FROM THE CRITICS Publishers Weekly Human rights come from human wrongs, argues famed criminal and civil rights lawyer Dershowitz; only by looking closely at past injustice we can construct a theory and law that attempts a more perfect justice. This collection of 55 short pieces (some new, most reprinted) maps out Dershowitz's thoughts on a wide range of legal and social topics: the role of psychiatry in the legal process, the problems of how the U.S. legal system chooses judges, the misuses of entrapment and "sting" operations even when used. PUBLISHED AT TWENTY SEVEN DOLLARS. 550 pages.  Little, Brown & Company 0-316-18141-2 / 9780316181419
      Hardcover As New  Very Good Book Jacket Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A. Remainder Mark Outside Pages 

      Price: 15.75 USD

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      5 The Advocate's Devil
      Dershowitz, Alan M.
      000735 Hard Cover. As New/Very Good. 6x9. ISBN:0446517593. From the book jacket: What do you do if you are a defense attorney -- and you suspect your client is guilty? From Alan M. Dershowitz, one of America's most celebrated legal tacticians, comes a riveting novel about a basketball player accused of rape -- and the defense lawyer who tries to save him. -- Condition: Brand new inside. Book jacket label and some smudging.  New York, NY, U.S.A.: Warner Books, Incorporated, 2001 


      Price: 15.75 USD
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