The Atlanta Lawyer June/July 2016 | Page 35

Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg as you have never seen her before! This book explores her life and career, battles against sexism, and her innovative legal work on the nation’s highest court. As the country struggles with issues of gender equality and civil rights, Notorious RBG shows how far we’ve come, and the work yet to be done. The Sleep Revolution: Transforming your life, one night at a time by Arianna Huffington If you are an attorney or a law school student, chances are you are sleep deprived. In this book, author Ariana Huffington discusses how our culture dismisses sleep as “a waste of time” when in actuality, a lack of sleep negatively affects our health, decision-making skills, relationships, and quality of work. She presents tips and recommendations on getting better, more restorative sleep. So, Anyway by John Cleese Did you know that prior to working in the entertainment industry, John Cleese studied law at Cambridge? This is just one of the stops on the author’s Grand Tour of his life, which covers everything from his childhood days in a small English town to the founding of the landmark Monty Python comedy troupe. Recommendations from A Cappella Books 208 Haralson Ave. NE, Atlanta GA 30307 (404) 681-5128 acappellabooks.com The Children Act by Ian McEwan The plotlines of McEwans’s books often turn on a single decision. In The Children Act, that decision is a ruling by fictional High Court Justice Fiona Maye. In her role as a family court arbiter, Maye must make an agonizing choice: force a teenager to receive a life-saving blood transfusion, or adhere to the parent’s refusal of treatment, based on their faith. Cop Town by Karin Slaughter Taking a break from her other fiction series, Slaughter takes the reader back to 1970s Atlanta. Newly elected Mayor Maynard Jackson and Police Commissioner Reginald Eaves have dictated radical change in the Atlanta Police Department: it must integrate women and different races into the detective force. Main character Maggie Lawson, new to the APD, has been tasked with investigating attacks on police officers, in light of the social changes occurring in Atlanta. Don’t Talk to Strangers by Amanda Kyle Williams In Williams’ third book featuring the fictional Atlanta private investigator Keye Street, Williams sends Street far from her comfortable Georgian Terrace loft to look for a killer hiding in the countryside of Whisper, Georgia. Street is gutsy, smart and determined… but this may be a case she cannot solve. Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson Author Bryan Stevenson, an attorney who grew up in a segregated Chesapeake Bay community, says that he struggled to feel connected with the law, that is, until he began an internship in Atlanta with the Southern Prisoners Defense Committee. This led him to found the Equal Justice Initiative, a group of which defends prisoners who were inadequately represented based on their race. This book, equal parts horror story and inspira tion story, follows these eye-opening accounts. Let Him Go by Larry Watson Vastly under recognized as an author, Larry Watson ( Justice, Montana 1948, Orchard) illustrates in exquisite prose the gifts and the costs of love. The book follows Margaret and George Blackledge as they travel across North Dakota and Montana, in hopes of claiming their only grandchild. Readers will not soon forget The Blackledges… or author Larry Watson. Missoula by Jon Krakauer Author Krakauer, known for his books Into Thin Air, Into the Wild, and Under the Banner of Heaven, explores the compelling social issue of sexual assaults on campuses. While Krakauer focuses on assault cases at the University of Montana, he places them within a larger context of academic, athletic, social and legal communities. Out of the Blues by Trudy Nan Boyce In her debut novel, retired Atlanta Police Detective Trudy Boyce introduces readers to fictional character Sarah “Salt” Altman. Salt, a newly promoted APD detective, is thrown a murder investigation of a young boy and a decades-old cold case murder of a The Official News Publication of the Atlanta Bar Association THE ATLANTA LAWYER 35