One L
The Turbulent True Story of a First Year at Harvard Law School
by Scott Turow
5/5
Grand Central Publishing 304 pages January 1, 1997
An autobiographical account of Scott Turow's first year at Harvard Law School, where the brilliant and ambitious are systematically broken down and remade into lawyers. One L is the book every law student reads before — or during — their first year, and the one their spouses read to understand what happened to the person they married.
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Jim's Review
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Turow wrote One L the summer after his first year at HLS, and the book became required reading for every law student since. He describes the Socratic method, the brutal grading curve, the competitive paranoia, and the slow disintegration of his old self with the precision of someone still bruised. He went on to write Presumed Innocent — One L is the apprenticeship piece. The HLS of 1975 is not the HLS of 2026, but the psychological machinery is the same. Five worms. Read it before you apply; read it again at the end of 1L year so you can laugh about it.
Jim's Weekly Worm Hole
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