Legalines: Constitutional Law: Adaptable to the Fourteenth Edition of the Sullivan Casebook 
asked by ragtop on November 11, 2006 11:30 AM
Legalines gives you authoritative, detailed briefs of every major case in your casebook. You get a clear explanation of facts, the issues, the court's holding and reasoning, and any significant concurrences or dissents. Even more importantly, you get an authoritative explanation of the significance of each case, and how it relates to other cases in your casebook. And with Legalines' detailed table of cases, you can quickly find any case or concept you're looking for.
But your professor expects you to know more than just the cases. That's why Legalines gives you more than just case briefs. You get summaries of the black letter law as well. That's crucial because some of the most important information in your casebooks isn't in the cases at all it's the black letter principles you're expected to glean from those cases.
Legalines is the only study aid that gives you both case briefs and black letter review. With Legalines, you get everything you need to know - whether it's in a case or not!
Reviews
This Legalines edition is the best one yet that I have used. It briefs all of the important cases in the Kadish casebook, as well as offering insightful comments. The book serves as a useful tool because it uses a step-by-step analysis of the court's reasoning. This analysis is essential to understanding how the different cases support, contradict, and stray from prior caselaw. This edition is also more useful than other study aids that I have purchased because it follows a specific casebook. My class used the Kadish casebook, a volume containing over 800 pages. Organizing and outlining all of the essential points from 800 pages is a task that would be almost impossible, yet the Legalines book does it and does it well. I used this casebook to help me study for my exam and it really made a difference. I was able to finally see the 'big picture' of the course and to remember the finer points of the major cases. I highly recommend this book to anyone taking Constitutional Law. As most law students know, digesting and remembering all of the important details of a course can be difficult and time consuming. I would recommend Legalines because it is keyed to specific casebooks and because it is packed with all the right information.
reviewed by orla on November 16, 2006 1:53 AM
