Mark Bennett | June 25, 2009
At Illinois and Missouri lawyer Evan Schaeffer’s Trial Practice Tips Weblog, Evan has a link to an Amazon list of 16 Books to Read if You Want to Become a Better Trial Lawyer by Dallas Government lawyer Shane Read. Shane’s list includes Gerry Spence’s How to Argue and Win Every Time, Posner’s How Judges Think, [...]
Category: become a better lawyer, books, criminal defense |
5 Comments »
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Mark Bennett | April 12, 2009
Jen got me a Kindle for our anniversary. I am highly impressed. I still have a stack of dead-tree books to work through before I can start going crazy buying eBooks, but I’m enjoying reading the International Herald Tribune for world news. Being able to carry a huge amount of text in a format the [...]
Category: Kindle, Texas Criminal Defense, books |
16 Comments »
Tags: Texas Penal Code
Mark Bennett | February 10, 2009
When I was learning to read, my favorite book was Bravest of All, by Kate Emery Pogue. This was a Little Golden Book about an old firefighter who, when all the young firefighters and shiny new equipment were out putting out a big fire, sprang into action with his old fire truck to save a [...]
Category: Goofiness, books, children, government |
11 Comments »
Tags: CPSIA
Mark Bennett | September 2, 2008
When lawyers start talking about The Art of War, I sometimes suggest that they should first read and grok — or at least understand — Lao Tse. My thinking is that without recognizing the philosophical pilings beneath The Art of War a lawyer can reach only a superficial understanding of Sun Tzu’s precepts. There are [...]
Category: Cognitive Science, The Tao, books |
6 Comments »
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Mark Bennett | August 4, 2008
Last weekend I read Brain Rules, by John Medina. It’s a slender book concisely describing 12 of the principles that govern how our brains work, and suggesting ways that businesses and schools might take advantage of these principles to help employees and students perform and learn better.
As knowledge workers and creative workers, we should be [...]
Category: become a better lawyer, books, neuroscience, scavenging |
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Mark Bennett | August 4, 2008
If you’re a criminal defense lawyer interested in the art of criminal defense trial lawyering, order Free Play: Improvisation in Life and Art and read it now.
Category: become a better lawyer, books |
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Mark Bennett | July 27, 2008
I like to read about fields other than law (improvisational theatre, comedy, chaos studies, interrogation, acting, survival, hypnosis, the Tao, NLP, aikido, etc.) that I think might be relevant to the practice of criminal trial law. I’m always looking for more suggestions — for example, when Western Justice wrote about Statement Analysis, I ordered the [...]
Category: become a better lawyer, books, scavenging |
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Mark Bennett | June 26, 2008
Richard “Racehorse” Haynes is the only person I know who has a nickname for his nickname. He’s “Racehorse” to the world and “Race” (or just “Richard”) to the his “brothers and sisters of the bar”.
I mention Richard because there are a very few lawyers — and Richard is one of them — whose tales a [...]
Category: books, cross-examination |
2 Comments »
Tags: books
Mark Bennett | May 27, 2008
I haven’t felt much like blogging lately; you may have noticed. I’ve been practicing law and catching up on my reading. Right now I’m interested in The End Of The World As We Know It. I read James Kunstler’s (his blog) World Made By Hand — good apocalyptic fiction (the genre of Lucifer’s Hammer by [...]
Category: books, emotion, intellect |
13 Comments »
Tags: books
Mark Bennett | March 25, 2008
Heat stroke (sun stroke) represents the complete breakdown of the heat control process . . . This is a true emergency. . . . The patient will be confused, very belligerent and uncooperative . . . . Spray with water or other suitable fluid and fan vigorously to lower the core temperature through evaporative cooling. [...]
Category: books, useful miscellany |
3 Comments »
Tags: books