BARbriefs
(Columbus (Ohio) Bar
Association)
1. "Law Review: A Love Story," California Lawyer, February 2003,
at 26-28 (formerly at http://www.dailyjournal.com/calawyer/index.cfm?sid=&tkn=&eid=484253&evid=1), reprinted in Chicago Daily Law Bulletin, February 14, 2003,
at 5;
Vermont Bar Journal, March 2003, at 32-33; "Love between lawyers, op. cit.," The
Montana Lawyer, March 2003, at 10-11 (formerly at http://www.montanabar.org/montanalawyer/march2003/love.html); The Nebraska Lawyer,
April 2003, at 19-20,
http://www.nebar.com/pdfs/nelawyer/2003/200304d.pdf;
Oregon State Bar Bulletin, May 2003, at 35-38,
http://www.osbar.org/publications/bulletin/03may/lawlife.html; Bench &
Bar of Minnesota, May/June 2003, at 34-35; "Law Review: A love story
remembered," Alaska Bar Rag,
May-June 2003, at 5; New Jersey Lawyer, The Magazine,
June 2003, at 87-88; Nashville
Bar Journal, August 2003, at 8-9; BARbriefs
(Columbus (Ohio) Bar Association), Fall 2003, at 21-22, The Docket
(Denver Bar Association), February 2004, at 14-15,
http://www.cobar.org/docket/doc_articles.cfm?ArticleID=3049
The article, which is my first published fiction effort, is to my
understanding unique: a love story written in the form of a law review
article. Law review articles are traditionally stuffy, serious, and
purportedly scholarly (and often long-winded) expositions on frequently
obscure (and deservedly so) aspects of the law, noted (literally) for
their extensive use of footnotes containing specific references to legal
cases, statutes, treatises, and other "authorities," which references are
painstakingly drafted to comport precisely with the rigors of official
legal citation style. Many of the citations are real (selected for their
James Bond movie dialogue-like double entendres in the present context);
some I simply made up (this is fiction, after all).
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