- A Civil Action by Jonathan Harr.
- A History of American Law by Lawrence Friedman.
- Anatomy of a Murder by Robert Traver.
- Becoming Justice Blackmun by Risa Goluboff.
- Billy Budd, Sailor by Herman Melville, 1924.
- Damages by Barry Werth, 1998.
- Death on a High Floor by Charles Rosenberg.
- Finding Your Voice in Law School: Mastering Classroom Cold Calls, Job Interviews, and Other Verbal Challenges by Moly Bishop Shadel.
- Greed ob Trial by Alex Beam, June 2004, Atlantic (Vol. 293, No. 5) (article).
- How to Argue and Win Every Time by Gerry Spence.
- In Cold Blood by Truman Capote, 1966.
- Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson.
- Lawfare: The War Against Free Speech by Brooke Goldstein and Aaron Eitan Meyer, 2011.
- Madame Prosecutor by Carla del Ponte.
- On Being a Happy, Healthy, and Ethical Member of an Unhappy, Unhealthy, and Unethical Profession by Patrick J. Schiltz, Vanderbilt Law Review, Volume 52, 1999 (article).
- Presumed Guilty by Jose Baez.
- Super Strategies for Puzzle and Games by Saul X. Levmore and Elizabeth Early Cook (as a useful introduction to one kind of analytical thinking that lawyers and law students employ all the time).
- The Bramble Bush: by Karl N. Llewellyn, 1930.
- The Common Law by Oliver Wendell Holmes (note: Ted White wrote an introduction to the John Harvard Library Edition).
- The Firm by John Grisham.
- The Justice Game by Geoffrey Robertson.
- The Limits of the Criminal Sanction by Peter Low.
- The Paper Chase by John Osborn.
- The Pinstriped Prison by Lisa Pryor.
- The Rise of the Conservative Legal Movement by Steven Teles.
- The Trial by Franz Kafka.
- Thinking Like a Lawyer: A New Introduction to Legal Reasoning by Frederick Schauer.
- To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, 1960.
- Walden Two by B.F. Skinner, 1948.
feb 2 2016 ∞
feb 2 2016 +