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priced at US $36.00)

Hereof, Thereof and Everywhereof: A Contrarian Guide to Legal Drafting


   by Howard Damstadter
Paperback:
American Bar Association
2002-06-25

Price not specified
   (circa U.K. £0.00 | CDN $0.00 | € 0,00 | ¥ 0)




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. . . or look at these related items (clicks open new pages):

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Editorial description(s):

  Product Description

This is no ordinary, dry-as-dust legal writing manual. Howard Darmstadter, award-winning columnist for Business Law Today, offers a lively collection of his own musings, reflections, suggestions, anecdotes, and witticisms that will entertain you as it teaches you how to modernize your legal documents.

Written by a business lawyer for business laywers, this enjoyable guide covers the basics of legal drafting as well as specific types of documents, such as agreements, securities prospectuses, and promissory notes. It also addresses the use of boilerplate, examples, and mathematical formulas.

Unique among drafting manuals, this publication includes a chapter on formatting a document--how good choices for typeface and size, line length, and paragraph can enhance document readability.


Reader description(s):

4 stars  Quirky, but with a lot of helpful advice.  (9/9 votes)

I like this book. That said, it has some odd things about it.

I like: its support of clear and direct legal drafting, and its advice to abandon the archaic, formalistic garbage that clogs so much legal drafting.

I like: the section on document design and format, which is contemporary and sensible; the author explains in detail why a lot of legal-document formatting still looks so stodgy: the lingering effects of the typewriter.

I like: the practical advice from an experienced drafter on a variety of drafting subjects: headings, numbering, boilerplate, definitions, counterpart documents, and schedules/exhibits.

But there were some unexpected and odd sections, too: (1) a fairly long discussion of using footnotes for citations; this seems out of place in a book about transactional drafting; (2) a short chapter on explaining with examples, which contains an odd section on how to pick the fictional names for the example characters you are using; and (3) eight pages on guaranties--not on how to draft them, but on the substantive law of guaranty and suretyship; it again seemed out of place in a book about writing.

But the book is modern and has a lot of practical advice. I recommend it.





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