Books

Our catalog of all books of all genres and formats.

  • Books,  QP Blog,  Stanford Law Review

    New Stanford Law Review Issue 5 Is Available in Kindle, Nook, and iTunes Formats

    Now available is Stanford Law Review‘s Issue 5 – May 2011. The Stanford Law Review is published six times a year by students of the Stanford Law School. Each issue contains material written by student members of the Law Review, other Stanford law students, and outside contributors, such as law professors, judges, and practicing lawyers. The current volume is 63, for the academic year 2010-2011, and the present compilation, in ebook form, represents Issue 5, May 2011. Contents for the issue: “The Objects of the Constitution,” by Nicholas Quinn Rosenkranz”; “The Lost Origins of American Fair Employment Law: Regulatory Choice and the Making of Modern Civil Rights, 1943-1972,” by David…

  • Books,  Journeys and Memoirs Series

    Jones’ Introspective, Candid Memoir About Living with Mental Illness as a Law Professor, A Hidden Madness: Available in eBooks

    James Jones’ acclaimed A Hidden Madness tells the story of an accomplished individual who has reached the pinnacle of his profession despite suffering for over thirty years from the severe mental illness bipolar disorder. He has done so mostly in silence because of fear of stigma. Extreme childhood bullying helped cause his condition, which has seen him hospitalized five times in psychiatric facilities for periods as long as six months. It is an eye-opening voyage through the little-understood realm of severe mental illness featuring its powerful medications, periodic hospitalizations, often rocky relationships, and light as well as dark moments. The story offers both real hope for those afflicted by serious…

  • Books,  Fiction,  History and Heroes,  QP Blog

    Virgil’s Aeneid Gets Translated to a Modern Ear and Abridged to its Essentials

    New condensed and annotated edition of the epic Aeneid makes it live for new readers, and explains key words, names, and places. David Crump's edition is lively and fast paced, and even rhymes. Ebook editions use innovative jumps to brief asides, rather than footnotes, while print editions place explanations at margins, arranged to mirror the text. Bridge summaries explain omitted parts.

  • Books,  Harvard Law Review

    7th 2011 Issue of Harvard Law Review, May 2011, Available in Ebook Formats

    The Harvard Law Review is now offered in a digital edition for ereaders — featuring active Contents, linked footnotes, active URLs in citations, and proper ebook formatting. Available download sites are linked below. The Harvard Law Review is a student-run organization whose primary purpose is to publish a  journal of legal scholarship. The Review comes out monthly from November through June and has roughly 2000 pages per volume. The organization is formally independent of the Harvard Law School. Aside from serving as an important academic forum for legal scholarship, the Review has two other goals. First, the journal is designed to be an effective research tool for practicing lawyers and…

  • Books,  Legal History & Biography

    G. Edward White describes Patterns of American Legal Thought

    A renowned legal historian at UVA and author of 14 books republishes his collection of astute and timeless essays on such subjects as the method and debates of legal history; the truth about Holmes and Brandeis; the legal realism school and its critics; the development of gay rights in constitutional law; and the origins of tort law. In digital formats and new, modern paperback edition.

  • Books,  Classics of Law & Society,  Featured

    Stuart Scheingold’s classic The Politics of Law and Order reissued in print and digital with new Foreword by Malcolm Feeley

    How crime and public fear of it are socially constructed -- not just a set reality to observe. Politicians and others use public anxiety for their purposes, and push a 'law and order' platform even as crime rates drop. As the foundational, supported study of the issue, it's often cited and used in later scholarship on crime and politics, from a legendary scholar in the field--an acclaimed follow-up to his landmark 'The Politics of Rights.' Available in ebook and print formats.

  • Books,  QP Blog,  Stanford Law Review

    Stanford Law Review‘s new Issue 4 – April 2011 – features articles by Stephen Gillers, Omri Ben-Shahar and Others

    This current issue of the Stanford Law Review contains studies of law, history, and social policy by acclaimed scholars Stephen Gillers (on the ethics of lawyers who hold real evidence in a case, such as guns, presidential tapes, and drugs), Natalie Ram (on DNA technology in family identifications, and especially its forensic use in criminal cases), and Omri Ben-Shahar (on fixing unfair and imbalanced contracts). This issue also features extensive student work on the history of religious freedom in the early 1800s and on the amicus curiae briefing process of the Supreme Court. The Stanford Law Review was organized in 1948. Each year the Law Review publishes one volume, which…

  • QP Blog,  Stanford Law Review

    Stanford Law Review‘s March 2011 Issue 3 Hits the Streets Early

    Quid Pro, LLC is the exclusive digital publisher of the Stanford Law Review. The latest issue, Number 3 (March 2011) features cutting-edge articles by recognized scholars on such diverse topics as “preglimony,” derivatives markets in a fiscal crisis, corporate reform in Brazil, land use and zoning, and a student Note on college endowments. It is available as a quality ebook even before the print edition is published. Footnotes, graphs and tables, and cited URLs are all linked, Contents are active (including contents page for each article), and tables are scaled properly. Available in multiple digital editions: Amazon for Kindle.  [And at UK Amazon Kindle store.] Barnes and Noble for Nook.…

  • Books,  Yale Law Journal

    Yale Law Journal Nov. 2011 Issue on International Law and Downsizing Government

    This issue of The Yale Law Journal (the second issue of Volume 121, academic year 2011-2012) features articles on new ideas in enforcing international law, and on the role of incentives and disincentives under the idea of limited government. Contributors include the noted scholars Oona Hathaway, Scott J. Shapiro, Benjamin Ewing, and Douglas A. Kysar. The issue also features student contributions on sentencing guidelines and the historical argument for Presidential war powers.