A Lawyer"s Life

EAN/UPC/ISBN Code 9780312278267


Johnnie Cochran had been famed as a folksy oratory in Los Angeles courtrooms since the 1960s, but the 1995 O.J. Simpson trial catapulted him to international fame--a status he gladly acknowledges in this bare-knuckles memoir of his years in court. Cochran doesn"t spend much time revisiting the Simpson case (except to proclaim O.J. innocent). Cochran devotes most of his account to less-celebrated cases that address repeated themes--police negligence and outright perjury; the difficulties minorities face in securing impartial justice; the inherent unfairness of racial profiling. Cochran describes his methods, and explains the reason for his rhyming summations ("If the glove doesn"t fit, you must acquit"): "Juries enjoyed them, understood them, and, more importantly, remembered them." Readers may not be won over by Cochran, but his book will be widely enjoyed and remembered. --Gregory McNamee