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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: D. Graham BurnettPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Edition: New edition Weight: 0.189kg ISBN: 9780747561682ISBN 10: 0747561680 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 06 January 2003 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsReviewsAs fascinating as any fictional courtroom thriller and a lot more thought-provoking than most . . . Burnett has a keen intelligence and he's a gifted writer--the book holds you in its grip. --Charles Matthews, Mercury News A minor masterpiece, a mesmerizing story of a system that would be right at home in a Franz Kafka story. In many ways, ÝA Trial by Jury is downright chilling . . . It opens a window on a closed, substantially flawed process . . . Burnett's prose is crystal clear. . . . This is a fascinating story. --Leo Irwin, Sunday News Journal (Wilmington, DE) ÝBurnett illustrates what a remarkable and sometimes remarkably strange duty serving on a jury can be . . . A riveting look at citizen jurors at work. --Seth Stern, The Christian Science Monitor A drama both human and metaphysical . . . a report from the trenches . . . It's not just the defendant who is on trial in A Trial by Jury, but the jury system and the jurors themselves. --James Traub, The New York Review of Books The heavy machine is what Burnett calls the criminal justice system; his close encounter with its well-greased wheels and levers is the subject of his immensely readable new book. --Jabari Asim, Washington Post By turns humorous and dramatic, A Trial by Jury speeds along; it can be devoured in a single sitting. Burnett is a graceful, economical writer, with a sharp eye for detail and a nuanced feel for character. He never loses his sense of the ridiculous . . . An irresistible book. --Barry Gewen, The New York Times Book Review The author, a historian of science, also proves himself an excellent student of human nature in thisfirst-person account of serving as the jury foreman in a New York City murder trial. Though the entire case, from opening gavel to final decision, takes only a few weeks, Burnett manages to paint vivid portraits of his fellow-jurors and examine the knottier issues of class, race, and gender that complicate the justice system's search for objective truth. Until now, the standard-bearer for jury-room dynamics has been Twelve Angry Men ; Burnett's narrative, while significantly more understated, is no less illuminating. --The New Yorker A slender, finely wrought book . . . unfailingly astute . . . That A Trial by Jury can be read in a few engrossing hours is an unexpected treat for busy professionals. That it is written with a grace and eloquence all too rare in contemporary nonfiction is icing on the cake. That it may actually make us better and more thoughtful lawyers and citzens is the kind of marvelous prestidigitation worthy of our best teachers. --Peter H. Schuck, New York Law Journal This book is a journey down into the grim boiler room of justice. Those who make this journey never forget the experience. They emerge seeing the world in a different way, and you'll understand why after reading this book. --Jonathan Harr, author of A Civil Action D. Graham Burnett's A Trial By Jury is the passionate, honest and humane true story of a murder trial and the torments of the jurors as they try to decide guilt or innocence. This jewel of a book describing a brutal, quirky killing tells us as much about the pain suffered by people having to make overwhelming decisions as it does about the good and bad of the American criminal justice system.Not since 12 Angry Men have we been so vividly brought inside the jury room and shown how 12 people--including the author--ultimately choose between justice and the law. --Martin Garbus, author of Tough Talk """As fascinating as any fictional courtroom thriller and a lot more thought-provoking than most . . . Burnett has a keen intelligence and he's a gifted writer--the book holds you in its grip.""--Charles Matthews, ""Mercury News"" ""A minor masterpiece, a mesmerizing story of a system that would be right at home in a Franz Kafka story. In many ways, ""ÝA Trial by Jury ""is downright chilling . . . It opens a window on a closed, substantially flawed process . . . Burnett's prose is crystal clear. . . . This is a fascinating story.""--Leo Irwin, ""Sunday News Journal ""(Wilmington, DE) ""ÝBurnett illustrates what a remarkable and sometimes remarkably strange duty serving on a jury can be . . . A riveting look at citizen jurors at work.""--Seth Stern, ""The Christian Science Monitor"" ""A drama both human and metaphysical . . . a report from the trenches . . . It's not just the defendant who is on trial in ""A Trial by Jury,"" but the jury system and the jurors themselves.""--James Traub, ""The New York Review of Books"" ""The heavy machine is what Burnett calls the criminal justice system; his close encounter with its well-greased wheels and levers is the subject of his immensely readable new book.""--Jabari Asim, ""Washington Post"" ""By turns humorous and dramatic, ""A Trial by Jury"" speeds along; it can be devoured in a single sitting. Burnett is a graceful, economical writer, with a sharp eye for detail and a nuanced feel for character. He never loses his sense of the ridiculous . . . An irresistible book.""--Barry Gewen, ""The New York Times Book Review """"The author, a historian of science, also proves himself an excellent student of human nature in thisfirst-person account of serving as the jury foreman in a New York City murder trial. Though the entire case, from opening gavel to final decision, takes only a few weeks, Burnett manages to paint vivid portraits of his fellow-jurors and examine the knottier issues of class, race, and gender that complicate the justice system's search for objective truth. Until now, the standard-bearer for jury-room dynamics has been ""Twelve Angry Men""; Burnett's narrative, while significantly more understated, is no less illuminating.""""--The New Yorker """"""""A slender, finely wrought book . . . unfailingly astute . . . That ""A Trial by Jury"" can be read in a few engrossing hours is an unexpected treat for busy professionals. That it is written with a grace and eloquence all too rare in contemporary nonfiction is icing on the cake. That it may actually make us better and more thoughtful lawyers and citzens is the kind of marvelous prestidigitation worthy of our best teachers.""--Peter H. Schuck, ""New York Law Journal ""This book is a journey down into the grim boiler room of justice. Those who make this journey never forget the experience. They emerge seeing the world in a different way, and you'll understand why after reading this book. --Jonathan Harr, author of ""A Civil Action """"D. Graham Burnett's ""A Trial By Jury"" is the passionate, honest and humane true story of a murder trial and the torments of the jurors as they try to decide guilt or innocence. This jewel of a book describing a brutal, quirky killing tells us as much about the pain suffered by people having to make overwhelming decisions as it does about the good and bad of the American criminal justice system.Not since ""12 Angry Men"" have we been so vividly brought inside the jury room and shown how 12 people--including the author--ultimately choose between justice and the law.""--Martin Garbus, author of ""Tough Talk """ Although this book purports to be a work of fiction, it is less a novel about a jury trial than a philosophical meditation on the nature of the justice administered by the state. This is an elaborate presentation of a fact-based story for those who enjoy a book that makes them think. A black transvestite has been murdered in the gay area of downtown New York, and a suspect has been apprehended with the blood of the victim on his clothes. The case seems open-and-shut, but the jury has to consider whether the state has made a sufficiently strong case for a verdict of guilty beyond reasonable doubt to be appropriate. Once the question has been posed, the rest of the novel takes place inside the jury room, where the members of the panel debate the issue. This process throws up more questions: for example, are all citizens equally qualified to be entrusted with responsibility for the lives of their fellows, or should there be some standard for jurors? How far should the dynamics of the group, or the quality of its foreman, be allowed to influence the verdict? How much consideration should the directions of the judge be accorded? And most importantly, as the potency of the state is evidently so much greater than that of any private citizen, and its power to punish so absolute, should individual transgressions be judged outside the usual community standards? Anyone interested in these important questions of judicial ethics will find this a rewarding and thought-provoking read. (Kirkus UK) Author InformationAuthor Website: http://www.bloomsbury.com/Authors/details.aspx?tpid=488D. Graham Burnett is a historian of science and the author of MASTERS OF ALL THEY SURVEYED. He has taught at Yale and Columbia, and is currently assistant professor of history at Princeton. Tab Content 6Author Website: http://www.bloomsbury.com/Authors/details.aspx?tpid=488Countries AvailableAll regions |
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