Riveting reading on subjects of retaliation and redemption. Fluently argued, thoroughly researched, and with the additional benefit of helpful written notes to the text, and a well-stocked bibliography. If Professor Miller ever visits Southern England, I'd love to hear him speak on his subject.
One cannot help but feel that our present day systems of legal redress might very well be improved, and legal costs reduced, if careful consideration were made of how to incorporate some of the beliefs and practices of previous expressed in this book.
Robin West (Georgetown Law Centre) writes on the back cover: "... how limply inadequate are our modern liberal and utilitarian understandings of justice that try so aggressively to purge this elemental instinct from our laws and law. Provocative, erudite, and sometimes laugh-out-funny - it [Miller] is also, often, convincing."
QUOTE: [pg 32] "The Hittite solution of paying for people killed with people seemed to Charles Buckley, a San Francisco electrician, the only way to make proper amends to the parents of a four-year-old girl he ran over while drunk in 1922. He offered his own five-year-old Isabel as compensation, and Mrs Buckley joined in the offer. Dollars, to his mind, was not the right money for the occasion."