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The Words We Live By: Your Annotated Guide to the Constitution

The Words We Live By: Your Annotated Guide to the Constitution

List Price: $23.95
Your Price: $16.29
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent read Good for classroom use
Review: I am neither a teacher or a student but do enjoy reading for my personal knowledge. I read a book of fiction which spoke about the Constitution and decided to learn something more about it. I searched AMAZON for Constitution and one of the books selected was "The Words We Live By". I noted that it had a 5 star rating so I thought I would check it out. I read the excerpt and was hooked.
This book gives you everything. The entire text of the Constitution, plain explanations of each section, history surrounding each section, major court cases, sidebars and pictures. I read it, not like a novel but would pick it up and read then put it down and let the information settle. There is a lot there and a lot to think about. It would be a good book for classroom study or when you want something that will hold your interest other than the usual novel.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent read Good for classroom use
Review: I am neither a teacher or a student but do enjoy reading for my personal knowledge. I read a book of fiction which spoke about the Constitution and decided to learn something more about it. I searched AMAZON for Constitution and one of the books selected was "The Words We Live By". I noted that it had a 5 star rating so I thought I would check it out. I read the excerpt and was hooked.
This book gives you everything. The entire text of the Constitution, plain explanations of each section, history surrounding each section, major court cases, sidebars and pictures. I read it, not like a novel but would pick it up and read then put it down and let the information settle. There is a lot there and a lot to think about. It would be a good book for classroom study or when you want something that will hold your interest other than the usual novel.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Glad I read it and want my sons to read it
Review: I found this book a great read. I'm now wanting to share with others the information that was revealed to me. My boys are working on their Citizenship In the Nation merit badge and I want them to read to read it also. The book has a friendly voice that is comfortable to read. Nothing stiff or stuffy about this one!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Get To Know The Words That Make Us Free
Review: I really liked this book and I feel like a better American for having taken the time too learn more about the document that made America the democracy envied around the world. I believe that every American should take it upon themselves to learn about their constitution instead of listening to what the talking heads and politicians tell them what it says. Maybe then we wouldn't have some of the problems we have. Now, I tend to be a liberal/progressive individual politically, but even I found some bias in the author's opinions, especially concerning the 2nd amendment, but that's what is so great about living in a free society: you can make up your own mind about such things.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Not Boring!
Review: I thought that a book about the constitution would be boring but this is certiainly not the case with Linda Monk's book! She offers a very informative yet entertaining read which includes a number of sidebars and illustrations making the lessons of history quite fascinating!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very readable and educational
Review: It would sound like hyperbole to say that this is a book every American should read, but it really isn't. In around 300 pages, Monk has put together an excellent book about the Constitution: informative enough so most readers will get something out of it but not so technical that it will turn those readers off.

Monk explains every sentence in the Constitution and the amendments, giving historical background and showing how the clauses and articles have been interpreted and acted on over the years. She remains objective but does not shy from controversy; when discussing such hot button issues as gun control, abortion and the death penalty, she presents both sides of the arguments, and by providing excerpts of writings by others, allows other opinions to be shown.

So why should every American read this book. Simply because this is a great introduction to the document that dictates life in the United States. An informed American is better than an ignorant one, especially in the voting booth. You may not be a full-fledged Constitutional scholar when you finish this book, but you will at least understand this document a bit better.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent introduction to the Constitution
Review: Linda R. Monk, author of _The Bill of Rights: A User's Guide_, has done an amazingly fine job with this book. If you want a one-volume introduction to the Constitution of the United States, this is it. (As a lawyer I try to keep an eye out for books I can recommend to people who want to learn how U.S. law works. This one and Jay Feinman's _Law 101_ are two of the best.)

In just over two hundred pages, Monk walks the reader through the text of the entire document (including the Bill of Rights), giving history, relevant cases, and an overview of competing interpretations. Sidebars present relevant quotations from, well, lots of people -- Charlton Heston on the Second Amendment, Ted Nugent on the importance of copyright, and tons of others. Monk makes her selections from across the political spectrum and she carefully refrains from taking sides herself. Terms that won't be familiar to the typical reader are defined in the margins.

Despite what you may have heard, her presentation is neither 'liberal' nor 'revisionist'. (For example, her presentation on the Second Amendment is nicely handled; we hear from all sides, but Monk makes clear that a federal appellate court has held that the right to bear arms is unambiguously an _individual_ right.) In fact, she does remarkably well at presenting all major points of view on each issue within a very short space, and she doesn't slight anyone; any reviewer who thinks otherwise didn't read the book very carefully (if at all).

Don't let the noise from the peanut gallery scare you off. People who don't want a 'living constitution' don't have a clue what it would be like to have a dead one. (For one thing, libertarians -- of whom I am one -- would be miserable. The police wouldn't need warrants to tap phone lines; electronic eavesdropping wasn't a 'search' until 1967, when _Katz v. U.S._ expanded the Fourth Amendment to protect us wherever and whenever we have a 'reasonable expectation of privacy'. And yes, that case is covered in here -- along with _Olmstead_, which it overruled, and _Kyllo_, which expands it to cover thermal imaging.)

Highly recommended to anyone who wants to know what the Constitution says and means. And that should include all Americans -- even the ones who already have copies of the Cato Institute's Constitution and Declaration booklet.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Words to live by
Review: Monk's book proved to be as easily read as it is profound. A facinating trip through the constitution for the layman that never failed to intrigue and surprise. Historical documents, quotes from our founding fathers and photography add a real sense of history to the book that kept me wanting to skip ahead for the next big surprise. I walked away from the book with a more thorough knowledge of the words that have shaped this country and the struggles others have had to fight to keep this document alive. The Words We Live By should be mandatory reading in this country's schools and I would recommend it to anyone interested in the past present or future of America.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Words to live by
Review: Monk's book proved to be as easily read as it is profound. A facinating trip through the constitution for the layman that never failed to intrigue and surprise. Historical documents, quotes from our founding fathers and photography add a real sense of history to the book that kept me wanting to skip ahead for the next big surprise. I walked away from the book with a more thorough knowledge of the words that have shaped this country and the struggles others have had to fight to keep this document alive. The Words We Live By should be mandatory reading in this country's schools and I would recommend it to anyone interested in the past present or future of America.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: The Liberal's Guide to the "Living Constitution"
Review: The annotated footnotes convey the modern statist revisionist interpretation of the Constitution. Oh, the Second Amendment affirms the state's right to keep firearms... States always had a problem procuring arms, so apparently they needed to affirm their right to have arms huh? --Cynicism-- Liberals love their so called "Living Constitution," where it is warm and fuzzy and beholden to the peculiar interprations of Supreme Court justices when they feel we've reached the next stage of social evolution. Every so often, they a take a deep breath, and uncover new "rights" in the "penumbras and emanations" that are actually hidden in our Constitution. They found the right to privacy for instance, which has a corollary right to infanticide. Likewise, they have discovered old rights (i.e. right to keep and bear arms) really weren't rights at all, but just misunderstood... Oh for joy!

Get the Cato Institute's Constitution and Declaration booklet in one and spare yourself the poor revisionist commentary.


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