 Wisconsin Lawyer
Wisconsin Lawyer
Vol. 79, No. 10, October 
2006
Book Reviews
High Conflict People in Legal Disputes

By Bill Eddy (Calgary, Alberta, Canada: Janis Publications Inc., 
2006). 272 pgs. $19.95. Order, www.janispublications.com.
Reviewed by Dustin Woehl
Doesn't this book's title seem to describe all litigation attorneys 
and most litigators? While the author focuses on understanding and 
managing four types of personality disorders that he characterizes as 
"high conflict" personalities, his observations and suggestions apply 
broadly to the extent high conflict personality traits are found to 
varying degrees in anyone involved in litigation.
The author discusses personality disorders generally and provides a 
detailed discussion of four high conflict personality types. For each, 
the author explains the basics of the disorder using identifying 
characteristics, formal diagnostic criteria, and examples. The author 
then discusses how each personality type creates problems in dispute 
resolution and how the personality type affects the person's 
relationships with professionals such as lawyers and mediators.
The second half of the book presents a four-step method for managing 
persons with high conflict personalities. For each step, the author 
describes specific, concrete skills to effectively manage relationships 
with such individuals. The author offers suggestions tailored for 
advocates, dispute resolvers (mediators and judges), and "targets of 
blame."
High Conflict People in Legal Disputes uses an accessible 
conversational style. The mental health jargon is balanced with concrete 
examples from case law and the author's experience as a dispute 
resolver. The book's organization is superb. The chapter headings are 
informative and descriptive. Each chapter begins with a cartoon and ends 
with a succinct chapter summary. Thus, a quick look at the table of 
contents and chapter summaries provides a useful recap of the entire 
book.
I highly recommend this book for all mediators and for attorneys who 
practice in family law, where the effect of high conflict personality 
types is most obvious. I also recommend the book to any attorney as a 
useful tool for understanding and managing professional relationships 
with "difficult" clients, whose personality disorders might distort 
their expectations of their attorneys and of the litigation process.
The ABA Guide to Marriage, Divorce & 
Families: Everything You Need to Know About the Law and Marriage, 
Domestic Partnerships, and Child Custody & Support
Edited by Robert A. Stein (Chicago, IL: ABA, 2006). 240 pgs. 
$16.95. Order, (800) 285-2221.
Reviewed by Sara Kornely
Marriage, cohabitation, raising children, divorce _ each of these 
major life events has great emotional significance as well as important 
legal and financial consequences for everyone involved. Most often, 
people experiencing key life changes are consumed by the stress and 
intense feelings associated with these changes. The ABA's family law 
guide provides a matter-of-fact summary of law and money issues that are 
coupled with these intense circumstances.
Updated from a prior version to address same-sex unions and domestic 
partnerships, the guide also presents basic legal information on a 
variety of family law subjects. The book addresses premarital 
agreements, requirements for marriage, wills, marital property, taxes, 
children, abortion, adoption, property division, maintenance and 
support, custody, and the various ways to end a marriage. Especially 
helpful are the bullet points included at the end of each chapter that 
briefly summarize the chapter's most important lessons.
The book also includes a chapter on deciding whether to divorce that 
discusses personal considerations as well as legal and financial issues. 
The ABA's sensitivity to all facets of life change makes the guide 
accessible to a wide range of people.
The ABA designed this book for the nonlawyer, and it is indeed a 
basic primer. Practicing attorneys will not find in-depth discussions of 
cases or comprehensive descriptions of each state's laws. As such, this 
guide likely is not a must-have for the lawyer's library. However, 
attorneys may wish to point new clients to this book in preparation for 
a first consultation. Clients can ready themselves for attorney meetings 
by reading a chapter entitled "Working With an Attorney." Also, 
inexperienced attorneys may consult this guide to gain a basic 
understanding of the issues and vocabulary surrounding family law.
In all, the ABA produced a comprehensive yet understandable survey of 
family law for nonlawyers.
Overcoming the 6-Minute Life: How and Why the 
Legal Profession Should Free Itself from Billable Hours
By Bently J. Tolk (The 6-Minute Life LLC, 2005). 258 pgs. $29.95. 
Order, www.6minutelife.com.
Reviewed by Richard E. Garrow
The theme of The 6-Minute Life is that there are many 
unhappy lawyers. The author argues that the scheme of billing in 
six-minute increments is the major reason for this unhappiness. A few 
times, he also mentions the quarter-hour measurement.
Author Tolk says the billable hour measurement was created by lawyers 
for lawyers beginning in the 1950s. He identifies three centers of 
income revenue: partners, associates, and paralegals. The follow-up 
question is how many billable hours are there per year: Tolk has a range 
of 1,500 to 2,500 hours. The book is 258 pages of easy reading. 
Three-quarters of the book details, with many examples, the deleterious 
effect of the 1/10th hour measurement tool including long hours, 
shortened vacation time, lack of family life, no time for nonlawyering 
activities, no introspection time, and so on.
Tolk has a chapter listing in descending order of satisfaction, 
lawyers' niches in the profession. The list begins with judges and 
continues with law professors, public interest or special interest 
lawyers, government lawyers, in-house lawyers, small firm lawyers, and 
solo practitioners and ends with lawyers at large law firms. Tolk's book 
focuses primarily on this last group.
Tolk devotes 10 pages to reviewing American Bar Association efforts 
to promote alternatives to billable hours, with ABA works dated 1989, 
1992, 1996, and 2002. Tolk posits that the ABA has not focused on his 
theme, which is the damaging effect of billable hours on the personal 
lives of attorneys who are required to use billable hours as a measuring 
tool.
Although the book is an easy and quick read, I do not recommend that 
it be added to attorneys' libraries. While the book champions the 
author's view of the down side of this measuring tool, large law firms 
already know the pros and cons of keeping time in 1/10 of an hour 
segments.
In the interest of full disclosure, the reviewer is a solo 
practitioner of many years and most often charges what he thinks clients 
will pay for his services. In contrast, the author has been in practice 
for 40 fewer years (than the reviewer) and is a member of a large law 
firm in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Academic Freedom After September 11
 Edited by Beshara Doumani (Cambridge, MA: The 
MIT Press, 2006). 327 pgs. $21.95. Order, (800) 356-0343.
Edited by Beshara Doumani (Cambridge, MA: The 
MIT Press, 2006). 327 pgs. $21.95. Order, (800) 356-0343. 
Reviewed by Susan M. McCabe
The Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on targets in the United States have had 
far-reaching repercussions throughout our society. In Academic 
Freedom After September 11, a collection of essays by scholars and 
educators, the various authors argue that today academic freedom in the 
United States is confronting its most serious threat since the 1950s' 
McCarthy era. This collection of essays grew out of a 2004 conference, 
and focuses on how government agencies, private advocacy groups, and 
special interests are subjecting institutions of higher learning to an 
increasingly sophisticated infrastructure of surveillance, intervention, 
and control. The authors assert that this campaign of censorship and the 
increasing commercialization of knowledge are combining to "reshape the 
landscape of intellectual production" and erode civil liberties in 
education and the larger society.
The essays address a variety of topics including the history and 
structure of the concept of academic freedom in higher education. One 
essay traces the impact of the global war on terrorism on both academic 
freedom and civil liberties and examines the chilling effects of 
government actions such as HR-3077 _ The International Studies in Higher 
Education Act (which would establish an advisory board of political 
appointees to monitor and control federally funded foreign language and 
area studies programs) and passage of the USA PATRIOT Act in October 
2001. Another essay dissects the concepts of academic freedom _ derived 
from values that attach to the special professional role of the scholar 
such as freedom of teaching and freedom of research and publication _ 
and First Amendment rights that are held by every citizen. Other authors 
focus on the impact of government and special interest groups' responses 
to 9/11 on the study of languages, cultures, and the concept of 
multiculturalism in American academics, the availability of grants and 
funding for research, the role of foundations and think tanks in 
knowledge production and dissemination, the function of dissent in 
academics and the larger society, and the curtailment of student rights 
such as speech and affiliation.
This book includes an appendix of materials such as the Ford 
Foundation's Memorandum on Grant Language and the American Association 
of University Professors 1940 Statement of Principals on Academic 
Freedom and Tenure that allow the reader to evaluate key sources 
discussed in the essays.
Although written by scholars and intended for an academic audience, 
these essays raise legal, political, and philosophical issues central to 
notions of democracy and civil liberties that affect all Americans. 
These forcefully argued and carefully researched essays provide the 
reader with a road map of the central issues and questions that all 
Americans _ not only educators, students, and parents _ must address as 
we pursue the global war on terrorism while preserving our democratic 
and Constitutional freedoms.
The Death Penalty on Trial: 
Crisis in American Justice
By Bill Kurtis (New York, NY: Public Affairs, 2004). 192 pgs. $25. 
Order, www.publicaffairsbooks.com.
Reviewed by Douglas E. Baker
When Walter Cronkite says a book is written with "a novelist's 
touch," and Scott Turow says it has "the hallmarks of the best 
journalism," the book is not likely to excel in either realm. The 
Death Penalty on Trial, though, comes close in both.
Bill Kurtis, a member of the Kansas Bar, has spent his entire 
post-law school career (Washburn University 1966) as an investigative 
reporter, primarily in criminal law. He says the genesis for this book 
was the 2003 decision by then-Illinois Governor George Ryan to commute 
the death sentences of everyone on Illinois' death row. Ryan did so 
because, after the death penalty had been reinstated, at least 13 
convictions had been reversed or commuted because of evidentiary or 
trial irregularities. Because that number was one more than the number 
of people who had been executed during the same period, it seemed to the 
governor that the entire process was (pardon the pun) fatally flawed. "I 
was shaken in the same way as George Ryan," Kurtis writes. "If these 
death row verdicts were wrong, how reliable was the system?" He set out 
to investigate death penalty cases, beginning with a general discussion 
of the system in Illinois, and ending with a recitation of the arguments 
against the death penalty across the nation. Those chapters bookmark 
specific stories of two men, each convicted, sentenced to death, and 
ultimately exonerated.
The novelist in Kurtis emerges best as he describes crime scenes and 
the day-to-day life on death row. The first subject is Ray Krone, a 
once-respectable mailman charged with the heinous rape and murder of a 
barmaid. Krone is convicted, twice, but ultimately exonerated by DNA 
evidence. The defendant in the second case, Thomas Kimbell, is the dark 
counterpoint of Krone. He is a drug addict and petty criminal convicted 
of brutally murdering three children in a trailer park home, but 
ultimately released after a second trial. The prosecutor, in true 
novelistic style, emerges as a morally ambiguous character, not 
necessarily an evil person, but under considerable pressure to quickly 
resolve the case. The journalist side of Kurtis rises to the top as he 
describes the trials, including the frustrations of and the mistakes 
made by usually well-intentioned court-appointed defenders. Both cases, 
says Kurtis, are exemplars of how things can go wrong. That, he 
concludes, is the crux of the issue, and the dispositive argument 
against the death penalty: "Lawyers are human beings who make mistakes. 
But where death hangs in the balance, we can't afford mistakes."
The book's strength is in forcing the reader to see _ since the death 
penalty had been reinstated _ the death penalty, and those sentenced to 
it, as more than abstractions and statistics. It also presents a brief 
overview of criminal procedure and a litany of tactics defense counsel 
should watch for and avoid. The book's weakness is its occasional lapse 
into inflammatory oversimplification, such as the assertion that "[t]he 
odds are still only 50-50 that the jury's judgment will be the truth." 
One would hope and expect that, whatever its flaws, the American jury 
system is still considerably better than a crapshoot. Likewise the 
statement that "a trial is all about selling your case to the 
jury.... It's all about razzle-dazzle." Maybe that's how they teach 
justice at Washburn (but I doubt it). In any event, few of us are in 
Kansas anymore, Toto.
Finally, the following discussion of prison machismo seems to have 
experienced an editorial lapse: "And if a guy even acts like he's 
disrespecting you, you gotta flair up, you gotta do something about it." 
Unless we're talking peacock-type displays, the proper word is 
"flare."
Top of page
To Review a Book...
The following books are available for review. Please request the book 
and writing guidelines from Karlé Lester at the State Bar of 
Wisconsin, P.O. Box 7158, Madison, WI 53707-7158, (608) 250-6127, klester@wisbar.org.
Publications and videos available for review
- 
ABA Legal Guide to Home Renovation, principal author Robert 
Yates (Chicago, IL: ABA, 2006). 224 pgs. 
- 
Ending the Gauntlet: Removing Barriers to Women's Success in the 
Law, by Lauren Stiller Rikleen (New York, NY: Thomsonlegalworks, 
2006). 408 pgs. 
- 
Executive Compensation and Related _ Party Disclosure: SEC Rules 
and Explanation, by James Hamilton (Riverwoods, IL: CCH, 2006).193 
pgs. 
- 
Fighting Son: A Biography of Philip F. La Follette, by 
Jonathan Kasparek (Madison, WI: Wisconsin Historical Society, 2006). 332 
pgs. 
- 
Guiding Those Left Behind in Wisconsin, 2d Ed., by Amelia E. 
Pohl, with Dale M. Krause (Boca Raton, FL: Eagle Publishing Co. of Boca, 
2003). 243 pgs. 
- 
Insincere Promises: The Law of Misrepresented Intent, by Ian 
Ayres and Greg Klass (New Haven, CT: Yale Univ. Press, 2006). 306 
pgs. 
- 
The Landscape of Reform: Civic Pragmatism and Environmental 
Thought in America, by Ben A. Minteer (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 
2006). 272 pgs. 
- 
Polarized America: The Dance of Ideology and Unequal Riches, 
by Nolan McCarty, Keith T. Poole, & Howard Rosenthal (Cambridge, MA: 
The MIT Press, 2006). 240 pgs. 
- 
Religion and the Constitution: Free Exercise and Fairness, by 
Kent Greenawalt (Princeton, NJ: Princeton Univ. Press, 2006). 480 
pgs. 
Wisconsin 
Lawyer