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In a society ever more obsessed with legal drama, David Boies, the
star of a thousand press conferences, stands head and shoulders
above the rest. The most prominent trial lawyer in the United
States, Boies was catapulted to international prominence when he
represented Al Gore before the Supreme Court in Bush v. Gore, in
the aftermath of the 2000 presidential election. But well before
the word "chad" entered our lexicon, Boies had participated in a
string of headline-making cases, representing the Justice
Department against Microsoft, CBS against General Westmoreland, and
Napster against the recording industry. Brash, reckless, and
prideful, he is also charming, charismatic, unerringly articulate
in the courtroom, and supremely comfortable in the public eye. He
is the epitome of the celebrity attorney and a peerless
practitioner of the art of law.
Legal journalist Karen Donovan, herself a lawyer, had unprecedented
access to Boies for nearly two years, accompanying him on his
high-profile cases and recording the workings of his brilliant yet
erratic mind. She gives us a scintillating chronicle of the legal
dramas in which Boies has played a crucial role. And drawing on
extensive interviews with his
former colleagues, she provides insightful analyses of his
strategies, his skills, his effectiveness, his penchant for
personal renown, and his flaws.
The story of a singularly gifted lawyer----his ambition, judgment,
and sense of justice----v. Goliath is also an illuminating
examination of a profession that, increasingly, confuses ideals and
celebrity.
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