Used price: $2.95
Used price: $6.90
Buy one from zShops for: $8.25
Many young people are attracted to the law as a way to achieve a more just world. Disillusionment sometimes sets in as students begin to appreciate that the law lags behind the development of community ideals. In this interesting volume, Harvard Law School professor Joseph William Singer uses a variety of references to make the case for amending the legal property rights in order to serve all better in the democratic community. Using sources as differing as the efforts to protect workers by the CEO of Malden Mills, the hit musical Rent, Jewish, Christian and Islamic sacred texts, and studies of the effects of new welfare legislation, Professor Singer argues persuasively for releasing many citizens from "duties" in the law that only serve to create harm in practice.
There is a comforting view of the potential to be humane in this book that will make any reader glad to think about the potential to be a noble person in serving all. Those who do not know about the legendary hospitality of Abraham will enjoy the part of the book that explains the impetus to serve others that is recounted in the Torah (and the Old Testament). The book's title refers to the Jewish law that fields should be cultivated to the edges, and that the gleanings from those edges be left for the poor (along with any grain that falls to the ground and any sheaves that are left behind). From this observance evolves the familiar and broader moral perspective that those who have, also have the need to share and assist others. We are all guardians for all.
At a time when individualism and materialism are strong, and community is becoming weaker, it is all the more important to consider the roots of what methods have always served the needs of humanity well. These analogies and our subjective reaction to them can help us understand where we need to rebalance our focus. If we can extend our vision to think about all the ramifications of our actions, we will take more meaningful actions that will bring us greater spiritual and material comfort. Done properly, the outcome will also be more prosperity for all, including those who give.
In what you do every day, how could what your organization does be changed to benefit more people and more kinds of people in more ways?
May you also find wonderful ways to expand health, happiness, peace, and prosperity for all!
Used price: $4.50
Buy one from zShops for: $5.20
Used price: $0.99
Used price: $4.49
Collectible price: $45.00
List price: $16.00 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $2.08
Collectible price: $19.99
Buy one from zShops for: $4.93
Singer writes about a small group of exciles who survived the Holocaust be fleeing to New York City and creating a community in the shadows of the Hudson river. It was here that they contemplated their devastaing past and doubious future.
The characters are intelleigent and intense, anguished by their expulsion from their homeland and the collapse of their cultural and religious values.
Used price: $32.50
Collectible price: $47.65
It's full of information on the life and times of one of our all time greatest song stylists.
Although this isn't directly addressed in the book, Frankie Laine's career (72 years and counting) is itself an overview of 20th century American music. From his childhood inspiration by Al Jolson (music's first superstar), through his introduction to the Jazz world of the 1930s & 40s, his own years of superstardom in the late 40s/early 50s, to his forthcoming album OLD MAN JAZZ (appropriately title, as he's now 89 years old), Frankie Laine has been an integral part of it all.
As the first "Blue-eyed Soul singer," he played a seminal role in the switch-over from Big Band to the Golden Age of vocalists, and ultimately (if inadvertently) helped paved the way for the Rock era. Always experimenting, his records range from jazz, blues, folk, pop, cowboy songs, country and even some rock and roll.
(That and the fact that he's the best damn singer that ever was.)
Laine's book is written in an easygoing, entertaining style, and if it has one fault, it's that at 228 pages it only whets one's appetite for more.
Used price: $7.95
Buy one from zShops for: $26.63
The writing is clear and comprehensible, and the cases are well chosen: provocative while remaining good examples of Black Letter Law.
My property class was the only section using Singer's book, and we are the only section that actually enjoyed the area of property law. This was not a coincidence.