Monday, November 14, 2011

Lincoln the Lawyer

Dirck, Brian. Lincoln the Lawyer. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2007.
ISBN: 978-0-252-03181-6
Available: Hardcover (also available in Paperback: 978-0-252-07614-5)
I just finished reviewing Brian Dirck’s Lincoln the Lawyer for the Indiana State Library's (ISL) Talking Book and Braille Library.

When I first opened the packet from the ISL, I must admit that I was looking forward to the project because Lincoln is an historical figure I have always respected and admired.

While the first chapter of the book provided a few interesting insights into the life of the man who would become the 16th president of the United States, it quickly became apparent that Dirck’s book was going to be as much, if not more, about antebellum lawyers as it was about Lincoln. In short, the book contains an ample amount of speculation throughout. The “Conclusion,” for example, describes in great detail what Lincoln’s professional career would have been like if he had not been assassinated in 1865 and returned to Illinois to resume practicing law.

While this is somewhat understandable, because much of what is known of Lincoln the lawyer comes from surviving court documents, in this case it is also for the best. I state this because when Dirck describes some of Lincoln’s actual cases, they are rather dull accounts concerning promissory notes, contract disputes, partnership dissolutions, patent cases and corporate cases involving railroads.

However, in all fairness, there were some “gems” to be found along the way; my favorite was the next to the last chapter, aptly titled, “Grease.” In this chapter Dirck analyzes the affects Lincoln’s actual law career had on forming the great man:

[Lincoln’s law career] taught him about the value of grease—that unglamorous, often overlooked but vital substance that lubricates and reduces friction to acceptable levels…This, at bottom, is the lesson Lincoln took away from his twenty-five years at the bar, a lesson he would not likely have learned from tiling soil or piloting riverboats or pursuing any of the other occupations available to him on the Illinois frontier (155 and 160).

In the end Dirck concludes that:

His magnanimity—if that is what it was—his generosity, and his humility were not manifestations of saintliness or an inordinately pure character. Rather, they were the products of a quarter-century spent in a law practice that taught Lincoln some difficult but exceedingly valuable lessons about limitations, boundaries, and the tremendous societal value of grease (172).

If you are looking for an exciting, insightful and interesting book concerning the life of Honest Abe, then this book is probably not for you. However, if you are interested in the history of United States law, are a Lincoln scholar, or a student preparing a research paper on the Great Emancipator, then this book is certainly worth your consideration. That is why my recommendation is for:

Law Libraries and Academic Libraries

All other types of libraries could spend their money more wisely.











Monday, October 3, 2011

Indiana Voices: Literary Reviews

The Indiana State Library's (ISL) Talking Book and Braille Library (TBBL) is the Indiana Regional Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped and has been in service since 1934. The ISL's TBBL records books and magazine articles with Indiana connections that are unavailable in an audio format.

I began volunteering as an Indiana Voices Project Reviewer for the ISL’s TBBL in February 2010. As a Project Reviewer, I listen to a completed project and follow along with a copy of the text to ensure accuracy and to note any mistakes or instances of violence, sexuality, or profanity (for patrons who wish to avoid such subject matter). Currently, I have logged over 300 hours of service for the ISL.

I originally volunteered for the ISL’s TBBL because I thought it was a worthy cause and it seemed like a nice fit for a librarian and Eagle Scout like me. (The notion of, "Do a Good Turn Daily" is always on my mind.) However, it occurred to me that I could be of further service to the library world if I were to also write literary reviews for the books I have completed. Therefore, in the coming weeks, months and years I hope to provide some short, interesting and informative literary reviews of those books in the space I like to call Michael's Library (A Brave New Blog). For a complete list of the titles I have reviewed, join me on LibraryThing. In addition, if I have time to read other books, I will review those here as well.