Books
Written by Podcast Guests | Recommended by Podcast Guests | About Women Judges and Lawyers
Filter: non-fiction | fiction | essays | memoirs/biographies | law
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Books Written by Podcast Guests
Featured
Nicole Stott Back to Earth: What Life in Space Taught Me About Our Home Planet―And Our Mission to Protect It
– by Nicole Stott, previous podcast guest (episode 164)
Edited by Tatia Gordon-Troy and Multiple Authors, Women in Law: Discovering the True Meaning of Success
– includes contributing author Michelle Banks, previous podcast guest (episode 150)
Caryn Schenewerk, Steve Mirmina International Space Law and Space Laws of the United States
– by Caryn Schenewerk, previous podcast guest (episode 111)
Amy Impellizzeri Lawyer Interrupted: Successfully Transitioning from the Practice of Law--and Back Again
– by Amy Impellizzeri, previous podcast guest (episode 105)
Lisa Kloppenberg The Best Beloved Thing is Justice: The Life of Dorothy Wright Nelson
– by Lisa Kloppenberg, previous podcast guest (episode 100)
Astrid Kohlmeier & Meera Klemola The Legal Design Book: Doing Law in the 21st Century
– by Astrid Kohlmeier, previous podcast guest (episode 117)
Jessica S. Henry Smoke but No Fire: Convicting the Innocent of Crimes that Never Happened
– by Jessica S. Henry, previous podcast guest (episode 92)
M. Margaret McKeown, Citizen Justice: The Environmental Legacy of William O. Douglas―Public Advocate and Conservation Champion
by Hon. M. Margaret McKeown, previous podcast guest (episode 90)
Patricia Hunt Holmes, Searching for Pilar
– by Patricia Hunt Holmes, previous podcast guest (episode 17)
Patricia Hunt Holmes, Crude Ambition: A Novel
– by Patricia Hunt Holmes, previous podcast guest (episode 17)
M.C. Sungaila Mother's Thoughts for the Day: Twenty-Five Years of Wisdom (1)
– by M.C. Sungaila, podcast host
M.C. Sungaila More Mother's Thoughts for the Day: Twenty-Five Years of Wisdom (2)
– by M.C. Sungaila, podcast host
M.C. Sungaila Mother's Thoughts for the Day Journal: Create Your Own Collection of Loving Wisdom
– by M.C. Sungaila, podcast host
M.C. Sungaila Quotes on Character: Inspirational Words on Courage, Leadership, and Creativity
– by M.C. Sungaila, podcast host
Books Recommended by Podcast Guests
Featured
I am a big fan of Toni Morrison. I have a literature background. Alice Walker is one of my favorite poets. I enjoy historical pieces by David McCullough. I enjoy his books. Those are the first ones that come to mind. There has been some science fiction that I've read over the years that has been fun, like Stranger in a Strange Land. I read that when I was young. Those are the ones that come to mind in terms of authors that I go back to.
– Recommended by Caryn Schenewerk, Vice President of Regulatory Affairs and Policy at Relativity Space (episode 111)
Nilofer Merchant, The Power of Onlyness: Make Your Wild Ideas Mighty Enough to Dent the World
– Recommended by: Mary Card Mina (episode 58)
“John Green is amazing. He also has a great podcast and a book called The Anthropocene Reviewed, where he reviews things in the world. He is brilliant. It's a good place to start, but his books are great. ”
– Recommended by Jessica Aronoff, CEO of Cayton Children’s Museum
“Who I'm into now is the man who wrote A Man Called Ove, Fredrik Backman. He has written some extraordinary books, like Anxious People and Beartown. He's amazing, and I would highly recommend him. He's a fun, well-written fiction writer, but he's amazing. ”
– Recommended by Jessica S Henry, author, legal commentator, blogger and social justice advocate
Thomas Merton, New Seeds of Contemplation
– Recommended by Nancy Wieben Stock, retired Orange County Superior Court Judge, JAMS affiliated judge and mediator
Sonia Sotomayor, My Beloved World
– Recommended by Erin Giglia, cofounder of Montage Legal Group and Camila Lopez cofounder of People Clerk
“My favorite book of all time is the Angle of Repose. I have read it multiple times, and I have made my children read it. It is brilliant.
Hands down, Faulkner always has been my favorite author.”
– Recommended by Molly Dwyer, Clerk of Court, Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
“Brené Brown is my go-to, feed-my-soul, I'm-okay, type of thing. James Patterson is an escape like, get in the book, get into the character and forget about everything else.”
– Recommended by Amy Stewart, founder Stewart Law Group
“Fiction would be a boring answer but you’ve got to go with John Grisham. For nonfiction, I like David McCullough. He wrote, 1776 and some books about Teddy Roosevelt. I enjoy his writing. I am a much bigger nonfiction reader than I am in fiction. I never enjoyed fiction but if you would make me pick it out, it would be a Grisham novel.”
– Recommended by Amanda Paletz, The Joseph Project
“I still think To Kill a Mockingbird is the greatest American novel there is. I read it as a teenager and it's a great legal story. A lot of other things in there too, with a great legal story as well.
I’m a big Ernest Hemingway fan”
– Recommended by Chase Rogers, former Chief Justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court
“I love beautiful or interesting writing. It's different. I remember Wolf Hall and it's from a different perspective. I remember reading and it was extraordinary reading. I forget what the story is because it's all that great story about the Anne Boleyn period but the way it was written was interesting. If you'd stacked up my books, the highest stack is probably historical fiction.”
– Recommended by Ann Kappler, GC of Prudential Financial
“I'm a great Jane Austen fan. I go to her often when things seem bad. I love a British novelist named Penelope Lively, who has written a series of wonderful novels over the years. Most of them for grounding women and their relationships. Also interestingly, given some of the things I've said in this show highlighting the role of chance in everybody's life, sometimes producing sad outcomes and sometimes producing happy outcomes.
I like to read mysteries. I also have some favorite mystery writers. Andrea Camilleri, who unfortunately is now dead, wrote wonderfully about this Sicilian detective. I love the ways that many mysteries are stories about different societies can give you a fun window into a different society. When I was younger, I loved Hemingway and some of the great American authors, Faulkner and Saul Bellow. There were not so many female authors at the time.”
– Recommended by Deborah Hensler, Stanford Law Professor
Books on Women Judges and Lawyers
Featured
Shortlisted: Women in the Shadows of the Supreme Court
The inspiring and previously untold history of the women considered―but not selected―for the US Supreme Court
– By Renee Knake Jefferson & Hannah Brenner Johnson
Lisa Kloppenberg The Best Beloved Thing is Justice: The Life of Dorothy Wright Nelson
– by Lisa Kloppenberg, previous podcast guest (episode 100)
Susan Oki Mollway, The First Fifteen: How Asian American Women Became Federal Judges
– Recommended by: David Lat, Above the Law & Original Jurisdiction (on Substack)
Sonia Sotomayor, My Beloved World
– Recommended by Erin Giglia, cofounder of Montage Legal Group and Camila Lopez cofounder of People Clerk
Lauren Stiller Rikleen, Her Honor: Stories of Challenge and Triumph from Women Judges
– Recommended by: M.C. Sungaila
Barbara Babcock, Fish Raincoats: A Woman Lawyer's Life (Journeys & Memoirs)
– Recommended by: M.C. Sungaila
Linda Hirshman, Sisters in Law: How Sandra Day O'Connor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg Went to the Supreme Court and Changed the World
– Recommended by: M.C. Sungaila
Jane M. Friedman, America's First Woman Lawyer: The Biography of Myra Bradwell
– Recommended by: M.C. Sungaila
Hardie Grant Books, Pocket RBG Wisdom: Supreme Quotes and Inspired Musings from Ruth Bader Ginsburg
– Recommended by: M.C. Sungaila
Rebecca Shriver Davis, Justice Leah Ward Sears: Seizing Serendipity
Book about previous podcast guest Leah Ward Sears
– Recommended by: M.C. Sungaila
Lisa Sarnoff Gochman, At the Altar of the Appellate Gods: Arguing before the US Supreme Court
– Recommended by: M.C. Sungaila
Nina Totenberg, Dinners with Ruth: A Memoir on the Power of Friendships
– Recommended by: M.C. Sungaila
“Stories, told well and acted upon by one generation, ignite the next generation to greatness; because they have heard with their own ears, and seen with their own eyes, what courage can achieve.”
— Bobette Buster