Shelby15 reviewsFollowFollowDecember 26, 2024Disclaimer: This is 2/5 on the casebook scale, not to be compared to novels and non-casebooks that I read for joy (rather than for grades). Pros:- Not as long as it could have been, I guess- It’s over nowCons:- DRY (it’s a dry topic but still)- Fun cases were few and far between (again, the topic)Note: I read the 13th edition, which is not yet available for review
Fiona115 reviews5 followersFollowFollowReadNovember 22, 2022done for the term... and it feels correct2022 nonfiction
William Snow135 reviews5 followersFollowFollowDecember 6, 2022Class taught by the author himself and the grandmaster of class actions, Arthur Miller….was kind of dope and analytically very challenging, but nice to steep super deeply in The Law (TM)
Josie Wu90 reviews11 followersFollowFollowDecember 7, 2024ngl not my favorite read but SCOTUS opinions are always interesting
Caroline Wolinsky11 reviews3 followersFollowFollowDecember 31, 2024Probably the most interesting one can make civil procedure.
Michael I 331 reviews1 followerFollowFollowNovember 21, 2025great casebook, but like all casebooks weakened because they don't tell you the law or give you practice opinions
Alan Edwards3 reviewsFollowFollowDecember 31, 2025Pennoyer, whatever happened there This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Lucy73 reviews2 followersFollowFollowJanuary 4, 2026It’s what you’d expect from a civ pro book… i learned a lot but it wasn’t my favorite textbook structure and setup but it’s over.
Justin McAndrew3 reviewsFollowFollowJanuary 7, 2026Long live the erie doctrine that I might understand sort of