This page compiles titles available at the reserve desk, for a three-hour circulation period. This list primarily consists of popular study aids produced by major publishers and the assigned text for your course. Feel free to consult with library staff for further assistance.
Please note that while our most current print edition of each title will be placed on Reserve, previous titles will be moved to the 3rd Floor Main Collection, where they will be available for a 21-day circulation term. Note that the Library of Congress Call Number will not change, so everything on this page will be available around KF1250.
Understanding Torts by John L. Diamond, Lawrence C. Levine, and Anita Bernstein
The regularly-updated entry on Torts for the Understanding Series, published by LexisNexis. This series is intended to be a universal companion to any given casebook on its subject, providing as straightforward and comprehensive an explanation of the topic as possible - with law students in mind. Likely the most "generalized" study aid series on the market, Understanding is a good choice for those patrons without a more specific need. The most current edition in print will be available in Law Reserve.
Hornbook on Torts by Dan B. Dobbs, Paul T. Hayden, and Ellen Bublick.
Hornbooks, published by West Academic, were the first mass-market series of commercial study aid published for American law schools. They are typically authored by well-known casebook authors as direct supplements to those casebooks - Prof. Dan Dobbs is the author of one of the premier Torts casebooks of the past fifty years - but are useful no matter what casebook a student is using, since the originals, such as Dobbs', tend to be hugely influential on later ones.
The Law of Torts: Examples & Explanations by Joseph W. Glannon
The interested law student can think of Examples & Explanations as a similar competitor to Understanding, but in this case published by Aspen Publishing (fka Wolters Kluwer). The Examples & Explanations series adopts the direct and explanatory tone of Understanding but typically goes into greater detail, often with numerous hypothetical examples illustrating a concept - hence the name - and a few sample questions. Examples & Explanations is recommended for students who like the Understanding format but wish to go into greater detail.
Notably, the author of this title, Prof. Joseph Glannon, is widely credited with establishing the modern law school study aid format, moving the industry forward from the Hornbook series.
Torts in a Nutshell by Edward J. Kionka Advanced Torts in a Nutshell by Peter B. Kutner
The Nutshell series differs from other law school study aids in that it endeavors to provide as simple and lay-friendly an explanation of its subject as possible without losing detail. They are the study aid of choice for students who find themselves, for lack of a better word, completely lost on a topic, but they will not offer the breadth and detail of Understanding or Examples & Explanations. It is recommended to read Nutshell to orient oneself to the basics of a topic, and then move to another study aid for a more substantive discussion.
The specific Torts topics covered in each of these titles can be browsed in the "Contents" section of each online catalog entry.
The Forms & Functions of Tort Law by Kenneth S. Abraham
The Forms & Functions series carves out its niche in the study aid field by focusing primarily on major cases likely to show up in law school casebooks on the subject. In this sense they are an excellent tool for checking one's work with case briefs.
Torts (Crunchtime) by Steven L. Emanuel
The Crunchtime series, as the name suggests, seeks to distill a full normal-credit course on the topic in question down into as short an outline as possible for the purpose of last-minute exam preparation. Out of the major study aid series, this is likely to be the least helpful in developing a deep and nuanced understanding of a given topic within the subject as a student goes through a course week-to-week, but is a great tool for focusing a larger review of material at the end of a term.
Acing Tort Law by Shubha Ghosh
The Acing series is another concise study aid series, seeking to distill its subject down to a relatively short length (typically 200 pages or so, compared to 6 or 700 in Understanding or Examples & Explanations) through a "checklist" approach. Acing provides key points the student will need to internalize and simply moves on. Students will need to seek a more in-depth discussion elsewhere but Acing can function similar to a rough outline of a course.
The Glannon Guide to Torts by Richard L. Hasen
The Glannon Guides represent the original attempts by Prof. Joseph Glannon to modernize the law school study aid format, and heavy center around sample multiple choice questions as their primary teaching tool. They are strongly recommended as a method for sample testing, as not only will a Glannon Guide serve as a first-rate explanatory study aid, it will introduce the student to the format and tone of question she is likely to encounter in an exam on the subject.
Torts (Black Letter Outline Series) by Edward J. Kionka
The Black Letter Outline series divides its content into two sections: first is a "capsule" section that explains the content of the entire book in a digestible format similar to a Nutshell. This will be followed by an extended outline based on a major treatise or treatises. In the case of Torts, the treatises are Dobbs on Torts and the Restatement of Torts, 2d. The outline is a useful model for students for what their own course outlines ought to look like, though they frequently go into much greater detail than what may be necessary (several hundred pages).
Succeeding in Law School: The Torts Workbook by Herbert N. Ramy
This title is a spin-off of Prof. Ramy's widely lauded Succeeding in Law School, a book of more general advice on law school success. In this Workbook, Ramy is focused primary on the theory and methodology of the law school exam, and his outline of Torts is filtered through that perspective. It is obviously strongly recommended for fans of Ramy's other work, but stands on its own as a late-term outline and study guide.
A Short & Happy Guide to Torts by Roger E. Schechter
The Short & Happy series is a relatively recent addition to the competitive law school study aid market, and take a lay-friendly approach that's somewhat similar to, though not exactly like, the Nutshell series. Short & Happy is best described as a shortened Understanding aimed at early Undergraduates; it's still technically for law students, of course, but they are written to maximize accessibility and cover the material without making it boring or intimidating. Metaphors and acronyms are far more common than citations to cases or strict terms of art. Strongly recommended as an introductory title.
Principles of Tort Law (Concise Hornbook Series) by Marshall S. Shapo
As the name suggests, the Concise Hornbook series is a shortened, modern analogue to the classic Hornbook format, also published by West Academic. They are fairly indistinguishable from their forebears in format, but are typically around one third of the length and will not necessarily be attached to an established treatise or casebook the way the tradition Hornbooks are.
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