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VOL. 44 | NO. 39 | Friday, September 25, 2020

RBG in her ‘Own Words’ and those of her associates

By Terri Schlichenmeyer

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Please and Thank You. Those were The Magic Words you learned at your mother’s knee, the ones that opened doors and gained favors. That also was when you learned something important, as you’ll see in “My Own Words” by Ruth Bader Ginsburg (with Mary Hartnett and Wendy W. Williams): Letters, when properly collected, can move mountains.

Born in working-class Brooklyn in 1933, Joan Ruth Bader was her parents’ second daughter. Their eldest died of meningitis just 14 months later.

Theirs was a close-knit neighborhood, and the family had many of the luxuries of the day. Bader attended public school a block from her home. There, because of other girls in her class who shared her first name, she started using her middle name “for more official purposes.”

She was raised to be independent and was an avid reader, a notably talented storyteller and loved gymnastics but “was not… especially fond of math.”

And since she grew up in the shadow of World War II and was Jewish, she was fully aware of anti-Semitism.

Even as a child, in fact, young Bader chafed at inequality and “hypocritical rules.” She also was eloquent in her writing and was first published (in a Jewish Center newsletter) at age 13.

“My Own Words”

by Ruth Bader Ginsburg with Mary Hartnett and Wendy W. Williams

c.2016, Simon & Schuster

$30

374 pages

Her leadership skills apparent, she entered Cornell University the fall after graduation from high school. There, she was greatly influenced by two teachers, novelist and European lit professor Vladimir Nabokov, and constitutional scholar Robert E. Cushman. The latter “encouraged Ruth to go to law school.”

In mid-2003, co-authors Williams and Hartnett approached Bader Ginsburg and pointed out that it was time for her to tell her story, before someone else did. She had known both Williams and Hartnett for years through mutual interests and similar work, so “Without hesitation, I said yes to their proposal.”

In her preface, author and Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg says “My Own Words” was meant to be written after a planned biography but her co-authors “thought it best” to wait on the biography until her “Court years neared completion.” They “flipped the projected publication order…”

You might wish they hadn’t.

You’ll hang on every word of Ginsburg’s life story. It’s everything you’d expect from her, and it surely won’t disappoint readers. What will, though, is that “My Own Words” aren’t always her own words.

Yes, you’ll read transcripts of speeches by Ginsburg, legal briefs, bench announcements, introductions and wisdom inside law review articles.

Yes, you’ll see her fierce strength in that which she firmly believed.

But a good amount of this book consists of various-length essays, speeches and articles written by others about Ginsburg, including things written by her co-authors. That could be a disappointment; the written speeches and judgments are OK, but a biography...? Wait for it.

This is not a bad book. It’s just not what you might expect, so be warned.

If you want more biography, fewer essays, be patient; it’s likely to be coming. In the meantime, “My Own Words” will please you.

Terri Schlichenmeyer’s reviews of business books are read in more than 260 publications in the U.S. and Canada.

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