Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 300
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-1-4422-1245-9 • Hardback • October 2011 • $66.00 • (£51.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
978-1-4422-1246-6 • Paperback • October 2017 • $33.00 • (£25.00)
978-1-4422-1247-3 • eBook • October 2011 • $31.00 • (£25.00)
Clare Cushman, director of publications for the Supreme Court Historical Society, is the editor of and a contributing writer to The Supreme Court Justices: Illustrated Biographies and Supreme Court Decisions and Women’s Rights: Milestones to Equality.
Foreword by Chief Justice John C. Roberts, Jr.
Introduction
Chapter 1: Sink or Swim: The First Decade
Chapter 2: John Marshall Takes Charge: Establishing Power
Chapter 3: Justice by Shay, Stagecoach, Steamboat, Train: Riding Circuit
Chapter 4: Wives, Children...Husbands: Supporting Roles
Chapter 5: Yes, Mr. President: Appointing and Confirmation
Chapter 6: Learning the Ropes: A Rookie Arrives
Chapter 7: Inside the Courtroom: Views of the Bench
Chapter 8: Silver Tongues and Quill Pens: Oral Argument
Chapter 9: Nine Justices, One Bench: Building Consensus
Chapter 10: (Not So) Good Behavior: Discord and Feuds
Chapter 11: A Peek Inside Chambers: Clerk Stories
Chapter 12: "Welcome to the Chain Gang": Managing the Work Load
Chapter 13: Timing It Right: Stepping Down
Acknowledgments
Justices of the Supreme Court
Notes
Index
Supreme Court books seem to be in perennial demand, by both students and interested readers.
Courtwatchers caters to both groups by offering eyewitness accounts for an insider’s look at the people and cases that have shaped American history. Packed with stories from the 1800s to the present day, this volume also features black-and-white photographs and extensive notes.
— Booklist
Cushman (director of publications, Supreme Court Historical Society) has written a truly entertaining and informative work on the nation's highest court. The chapters are organized around themes such as the first years of the Supreme Court, appointment and confirmation of justices, circuit riding, feuds among the justices, how justices manage their workload, oral argument, a justice's first year on the Court, stories by the law clerks, and how to know when to step down from the Court. Each chapter is completely infused with stories from those who were there, such as the justices, journalists, attorneys, spouses, children, and friends. Drawing from firsthand accounts, journals, letters, interviews, and books, the author has painted as rich a tapestry of life inside the Court as could possibly be imagined. This book is highly recommended for anyone interested in the history and culture of the Supreme Court. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readership levels.
— Choice Reviews
Courtwatchers is more readable and fun than any Court history in recent memory. And its very existence stands as a symbol of how much the Court's attitude has changed toward the public's interest in the justices as real people, rather than oracles.
— National Law Journal
Too many studies of the Supreme Court are obsessed with ideas and politics with little attention to those who generate them. Clare Cushman provides a meticulously researched and thoroughly accessible antidote to the trend, and, for once the institution emerges with novelistic clarity as a collection of men, and eventually women, with vivid personalities, strong feelings, and every manifestation of the human condition. Cushman wisely relies on first-hand evidence from those on the inside to provide both authenticity and telling detail. A unique work.
— Dennis J. Hutchinson, William Rainey Harper Professor, University of Chicago, and editor of The Supreme Court Review
Opening this book is like peering into a fascinating scrapbook compiled over the centuries by Supreme Court Justices and those who knew them. It is a treat for anyone who cares about the Supreme Court and who wonders how it got to be the way it is today. I enjoyed it very much.
— Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter who covered the Supreme Court for nearly three decades for The New York Times
Opening this book is like peering into a fascinating scrapbook compiled over the centuries by Supreme Court Justices and those who knew them. It is a treat for anyone who cares about the Supreme Court and who wonders how it got to be the way it is today. I enjoyed it very much.
— Henry J. Abraham, the James Hart Professor Emeritus at the University of Virginia and author of Justices, Presidents, and Senators
Cushman, the director of publications for the Supreme Court Historical Society, has organized the book into themed chapters that flow freely across the centuries. She includes letters, diary entries, memoranda, and newspaper articles written by justices themselves, their clerks, their spouses, courtroom spectators, attorneys, and reporters. She serves up a potpourri of historical and recent “day-in-the-life” moments that reveal much about the evolution of the court. This tour through American and political history makes for a fascinating trip, bringing us closer to one of our most important institutions
— Middlebury Magazine