Two-time Pulitzer Prize-winner Anthony Lewis was a columnist for the New York Times op-ed page from 1969 through 2001. In addition to his long and distinguished career with the Times, Mr. Lewis has been a lecturer on law at Harvard Law School and a visiting professor at the Universities of California, Illinois, Oregon, and Arizona, and, since 1983, the James Madison Visiting Professor at Columbia University. His previous books are Gideon's Trumpet and Make No Law. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
"[A] heroic account of how courageous judges in the 20th century
created the modern First Amendment."--Jeffrey Rosen, New York Times
Book Review
"[Lewis] looks behind the printed page to scrutinize the
experiences and values of the men and women whose utterances are
given the force of law. The result is a short history of the First
Amendment that is always illuminating and sometimes
rollicking."--Los Angeles Times
"It's hard to imagine a book about legal history reading like a
page-turner, but this one does. The Supreme Court justices whose
decisions have shaped our country emerge as conflicted and
principled human beings. The questions that have yet to be settled
press impatiently against the book's pages, reminding us that the
First Amendment continues to shift under our feet even as we
read."--Providence Journal
"Lewis blends a profound understanding of First Amendment
jurisprudence and history with an enjoyable writing style that his
readers have long come to admire. In our war-torn era where dissent
and open-minded debate have become problematic, Lewis compels us to
remember the crucial function free speech serves in our democratic
form of government."--Christian Science Monitor
Mr. Lewis does a remarkable job of presenting the history and scope
of freedom of thought...a concise and wise book."--Economist
[A] heroic account of how courageous judges in the 20th century
created the modern First Amendment.--Jeffrey Rosen, New York
Times Book Review
[Lewis] looks behind the printed page to scrutinize the experiences
and values of the men and women whose utterances are given the
force of law. The result is a short history of the First Amendment
that is always illuminating and sometimes rollicking.--Los Angeles
Times
It's hard to imagine a book about legal history reading like a
page-turner, but this one does. The Supreme Court justices whose
decisions have shaped our country emerge as conflicted and
principled human beings. The questions that have yet to be settled
press impatiently against the book's pages, reminding us that the
First Amendment continues to shift under our feet even as we
read.--Providence Journal
Lewis blends a profound understanding of First Amendment
jurisprudence and history with an enjoyable writing style that his
readers have long come to admire. In our war-torn era where dissent
and open-minded debate have become problematic, Lewis compels us to
remember the crucial function free speech serves in our democratic
form of government.--Christian Science Monitor
Mr. Lewis does a remarkable job of presenting the history and scope
of freedom of thought...a concise and wise book.--Economist
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