Problems in Contract Cases and Materials , by Charles L. Knapp, Nathan M. Crystal, Harry G. Prince, Danielle K. Hart, and Joshua M. Silverstein, includes cases with notes and explanatory text, additional commentary, essay, and short-answer problems, and multiple-choice review questions for each chapter. The cases selected are a balance of traditional and contemporary that reflect the development and complexity of contract law. Explanatory notes and text place the classic and newer decisions in their larger legal context. Questions and problems provide opportunities to practice core legal skills and encourage students to explore the relationship between theory and practice. This successful book is well known for approaching contract law and theory from multiple perspectives and using a variety of contractual settings. Adaptable for instructors with different pedagogical philosophies, Problems in Contract Law can easily be used in teaching by traditional case analysis, through problem-based instruction, or using theoretical inquiry. Buy a new version of this textbook and receive access to the Connected eBook with Study Center on CasebookConnect, lifetime access to the online ebook with highlight, annotation, and search capabilities; practice questions from your favorite study aids; an outline tool and other helpful resources . Connected eBooks provide what you need most to be successful in your law school classes. New to the 10th Professors and students will benefit
It did what it was supposed too. Honestly the professor made it more interesting. Now I have to start studying for the final, so we’ll be spending a bit more time together I guess.
7/10 recommend. Some pretty interesting cases, I would love to meet Homer Buffaloe in person and talk about tobacco barns. Let's hope I kill this exam--check back on December 13th.
Probably the best book I read all semester. As an unexpected side effect I am now concerned that everything I say can be made into a binding contract in a court of law. Stay safe out there!!! Best case: the gold digging neighbor of Dorman v. Swaney. Honorable mentions include: the OG influencer Lucy Lady-Duff Gordon, 2 time lottery winner Homer Buffaloe, the fraudulent dance studio, and Mr. Kent who only wanted his boujee Reading Pipe. ABC. Always be contracting.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I read 515 pages for this ONE class and while I will use the SAME book next semester - 515 pages is more than I read in most of any one book - so I am counting it as a read book for 2009 - and the 6 chapters we will read next semester will be a 2010 book for that goal . . . .
. . . what did I learn from this book? that I don't like contracts but I can't live without them
tbh did NOT read as much as I should have because after the second time kristen holmquist called on me I was DONE being cold called for the rest of the semester. But the blood swear and tears that have fallen into this book (or would have fallen had I not made the economically sound decision to find the epub) means I've got to log it... please send thoughts and prayers for my final in two weeks. Promissory estoppel? you will always be famous? Anticipatory repudiation? I love you. Battle of forms? UCC 2-207??? You are NOT invited to my birthday party.
I actually enjoyed this textbook. Beginner friendly, and the notes tell you everything you need to know. Very comprehensive (maybe too comprehensive in some sections, but it depends on which cases you read and what you're expected to know). Maybe it was just the way my prof used it, but everything slotted together using this book.
Did they forget the existence of the backspace button in the second half of the book? Ngl a lot of those cases should have been edited doooown. Shout out to the juicy cases, literally the only thing that got me through close to the end 🫶🏼
hate hate hate hate like literally shut up about the random codes that have no pertinence to the material we need to understand. edits were way too dense