Not surprisingly, O'Connor is at her most frank and most interesting when she addresses her status as the first woman to serve on the court. What difference has it made to the institution? Her answer is somewhat equivocal. ''My intuition and my experience persuade me that having women on the bench, and in other positions of prominence, is extremely important.'' She adds that until the percentage of women in important office, including the court, comes ''closer to 50 percent, we cannot say we have succeeded'': success would matter not because women bring a different view to judging, or legislating (she served in the Arizona legislature before becoming a state court judge). Only stereotypes, she argues, prevent women from achieving parity, a view borne of her own experience 50 years ago, when the only job a law firm offered her, after she made a distinguished record at Stanford Law School, was as a legal secretary. Dennis J. Hutchinson
Not surprisingly, O'Connor is at her most frank and most interesting when she addresses her status as the first woman to serve on the court. What difference has it made to the institution? Her answer is somewhat equivocal. ''My intuition and my experience persuade me that having women on the bench, and in other positions of prominence, is extremely important.'' She adds that until the percentage of women in important office, including the court, comes ''closer to 50 percent, we cannot say we have succeeded'': success would matter not because women bring a different view to judging, or legislating (she served in the Arizona legislature before becoming a state court judge). Only stereotypes, she argues, prevent women from achieving parity, a view borne of her own experience 50 years ago, when the only job a law firm offered her, after she made a distinguished record at Stanford Law School, was as a legal secretary.
The New York Times
O'Connor is most compelling in the essays that shed light on the sorts of influences that affect her as a judge: how her experiences as a state legislator in Arizona have informed her feelings about states' rights or how her inability to get anything other than a legal secretary's job despite excellent grades at Stanford Law School colors her view of discrimination cases. While she acknowledges that her role is limited to interpreting the law, her essay on Thurgood Marshall is one of the most telling chapters of the book. Here she admits to being moved by his storytelling and profoundly influenced by his struggles with racism and his compassion for the downtrodden. This quality in O'Connor -- a willingness to look beyond black-letter law and express sympathy for the weak -- is something one sometimes witnesses at oral argument.
The Washington Post
O'Connor is most compelling in the essays that shed light on the sorts of influences that affect her as a judge: how her experiences as a state legislator in Arizona have informed her feelings about states' rights or how her inability to get anything other than a legal secretary's job despite excellent grades at Stanford Law School colors her view of discrimination cases. While she acknowledges that her role is limited to interpreting the law, her essay on Thurgood Marshall is one of the most telling chapters of the book. Here she admits to being moved by his storytelling and profoundly influenced by his struggles with racism and his compassion for the downtrodden. This quality in O'Connor -- a willingness to look beyond black-letter law and express sympathy for the weak -- is something one sometimes witnesses at oral argument. — Dahlia Lithwick
In The Majesty of the Law, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor has blended personal reflections with key professional insights to give us a richly textured account of the fascinating history, current status, and hopeful future of the rule of law. The fact that the author is destined to take her place among the most influential Justices to serve on the modern U.S. Supreme Court makes this important book all the more significant.
Martin Professor of Law at New York Law School and author of What Kind of Nation: Thomas Jefferson, John Marshall, and the Epic Struggle to Create a United States
A marvelous collection of wide-ranging and plainspoken ruminations on the Constitution, constitutionalism, and the Supreme Court by the Court's first female Justice. Justice O'Connor's keen-wittedness, honesty, and common sense are revealed throughout. Although she eloquently reveals the majesty of the law, she also brings that majesty down to earth and makes it intelligible to all of us. It is her special genius.
Alva O. Way University Professor and professor of history at Brown University, author of The American Revolution: A History
Justice O'Connor's newest book will intrigue and enlighten many different readers. She discusses multiple issues, including what it's like to be on the Supreme Court, how and by whom the Court has been shaped, and the meaning of the rule of law. Her reflections on women in the law, and women in power, are especially thought-provoking. No one is better qualified than she to write about these issues, and she does so with her customary wit and clarity.
president, Duke University
With this important book, one of the most intriguing figures in American history reveals her private musings about history, the law, and her own life-both public and personal. The Majesty of the Law shows us why Sandra Day O'Connor is so compelling as a human being and so vital as a public thinker.
author of The Conquerors: Roosevelt, Truman and the Destruction of Hitler's Germany, 1941-1945
An informative, behind-the-scenes view of daily life at the tallest bench in the land. One of the most ingenious points of American democracy, writes Justice O’Connor (Lazy B, 2001), is its according "dual sovereignty" to the national and state governments; it is also one of its thorniest aspects, a source of constant conflict. Hence, the Supreme Court, which, since the days of John Marshall, has reserved for itself the power to determine whether a given law falls within the bounds of the Constitution. Justice O’Connor looks at a few of the signal cases the Court has heard in the last half-century, such as Brown v. Board of Education; profiles predecessors and colleagues like Thurgood Marshall and Warren Burger; holds forth on practical problems, e.g., jury duty ("It is incumbent upon those who oversee their jury systems to make sure that jury service, for whatever length of time, is bearable"); and exalts the better angels of American democracy, however fragile, witness the principle "that certain fundamental rights, to which every citizen is entitled, mist be placed outside the reach of political exigency." Throughout, Justice O’Connor writes with lively humor; considering the mounds of paper that cross her desk: for instance, "The Court is a more reliable backstop for the health of the paper industry than any protectionist legislation Congress might pass." Humor aside, and despite her conservative leanings, she also writes with a sharp sense of appreciation for dissenting views, and she is keenly appreciative of the growing role of women in political decision-making, arguing that "society as a whole can benefit immeasurably from a climate in which all persons, regardless of gender,have the opportunity to earn respect, responsibility, advancement, and remuneration based on ability." An able primer on the role of the Supreme Court in American life, and on the merits--and shortcomings--of American democracy.
Majestic.”—The Washington Post
“With this important book, one of the most intriguing figures in American history reveals her private musings about history, the law, and her own life—both public and personal. The Majesty of the Law shows us why Sandra Day O’Connor is so compelling as a human being and so vital as a public thinker.”—Michael Beschloss, author of The Conquerors: Roosevelt, Truman and the Destruction of Hitler’s Germany, 1941–1945
“Justice O’Connor’s newest book will intrigue and enlighten many different readers. She discusses multiple issues, including what it’s like to be on the Supreme Court, how and by whom the Court has been shaped, and the meaning of the rule of law. Her reflections on women in the law, and women in power, are especially thought-provoking. No one is better qualified than she to write about these issues, and she does so with her customary wit and clarity.”—Nan Keohane, president, Duke University
“A marvelous collection of wide-ranging and plainspoken ruminations on the Constitution, constitutionalism, and the Supreme Court by the Court’s first female Justice. Justice O’Connor’s keen-wittedness, honesty, and common sense are revealed throughout. Although she eloquently reveals the majesty of the law, she also brings that majesty down to earth and makes it intelligible to all of us. It is her special genius.”—Gordon S. Wood, Alva O. Way University Professor and professor of history at Brown University, author of The American Revolution: A History
“In The Majesty of the Law, Justice Sandra Day O’Connor has blended personal reflections with key professional insights to give us a richly textured account of the fascinating history, current status, and hopeful future of the rule of law. The fact that the author is destined to take her place among the most influential Justices to serve on the modern U.S. Supreme Court makes this important book all the more significant.”—James F. Simon, Martin Professor of Law at New York Law School and author of What Kind of Nation: Thomas Jefferson, John Marshall, and the Epic Struggle to Create a United States