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I Rest My Case
 
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I Rest My Case [Hardcover]

Peter Golden (Author), J. Stanley Shaw (Author)
2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Book Description

January 18, 2000
I Rest My Case is a fascinating and profoundly moving memoir that chronicles the life of J. Stanley Shaw from his childhood years under the supervision of the Brooklyn Hebrew Orphan Asylum in the 1930s to his career as one of the preeminent bankruptcy attorneys in the United States. Shaw's colorful and often poignant reminiscences take us from Depression-era Brooklyn, through his years at Columbia University and New York Law School, his early setbacks at the hands of an unscrupulous real estate developer who left him one million dollars in debt, the political education he received as a leader of the New York Liberal Party during the 1960s and 1970s, and his groundbreaking legal work in corporate bankruptcy. The pages of I Rest My Case are filled with fascinating characters-some famous and some obscure, but always memorable. Shaw was a candidate for mayor of New York, and his political career brought him into contact with a diverse range of luminaries from Nelson Rockefeller to Al D'Amato, and from George McGovern to George Pataki. Shaw has turned a wry and thoughtful eye on his life, filling the pages of his memoir with trenchant observations about the human condition. A brisk narrative set against a rich backdrop of American cultural and legal history, I Rest My Case is a testament to the strength of the human spirit and the redemptive power of love. All proceeds from the sale of the book will be donated to the Association for Adults and Children With Learning Disabilities (ACLD), a not-for-profit organization that assists more than 2,500 infants, children and their families.

Editorial Reviews

From the Inside Flap

On a cold, gray winter morning in 1933, when Stanley Shaw was not yet four years old, his mother brought him and his older brother Sol to the Brooklyn Hebrew Orphan Asylum. They would be under the supervision of the asylum until the summer of 1939, and as Shaw writes in this moving memoir, "I have spent tremendous energy during much of my life both embracing and fleeing from those six and a half years, simultaneously trying to remember and forget them, but invariably trying to solve the mystery of what brought me there."

What brought him to that lonely Castle on the Hill was the breakup of his parents' marriage. His father Louie was a hard-working man who also happened to be a compulsive gambler. Left alone without any money, his mother Ida was unable to care for her children, so after farming out her oldest boy Eli to her rich relatives in Long Island, she brought Stanley and Sol to the orphanage.

During the Depression it was not unusual for children with living parents to become wards of the BHOA. The youngest children, like Stanley and Sol, were placed in foster homes, and Stanley's experience with his foster parents ran the gamut from loving idyll to a nightmare out of Charles Dickens. His last placement was so grim he convinced Ida and Louie to give their marriage another try, a moment that today Shaw considers the first deal he ever made in what would become a lifetime of deal-making.

Once reunited, the family endured a series of trials that would haunt the Shaw brothers for the rest of their lives. Yet Stanley found his first taste of freedom on the streets of Depression-era Brooklyn, moving through a world of poolroom hustlers, bookies, gamblers, loansharks, and schoolyard friends.

After working his way through Columbia University and New York Law School, Shaw married and established a small law practice, only to find himself in business with a real-estate developer who proved to be one of the more outlandish characters in recent memory. At the end of their association, Shaw was in debt to the tune of one million dollars.

Depending on his wife Doris to hold their family together, Stanley Shaw continued to build his law practice. By then, he was immersed in Liberal Party politics, and his political career brought him into contact with the luminaries of the day: Governor Nelson Rockefeller; the Honorable Arthur Goldberg; Senator George McGovern; Mayor John Lindsay; and a host of others who trotted across the national stage. Before Shaw was finished with politics he had led a renegade faction in a battle with Alex Rose-the tall, broad-shouldered father of New York's Liberal Party and a legendary city boss whose power ran all the way to the White House. The war culminated in Shaw's candidacy for mayor of New York.

As his frontline political career drew to a close, Shaw was asked to look into the financial problems of the Bohack supermarket chain, and suddenly he was in the midst of a colossal five-year struggle that would become, at that time, one of the largest bankruptcy cases ever filed in the Eastern District of New York.

I Rest My Case is not simply a fascinating and profoundly moving memoir, and a generous slice of American cultural and legal history, it is a love song to Shaw's wife and children and grandchildren, and a testament to the strength of the human spirit and the redemptive power of love.

From the Back Cover

Praise for I Rest My Case:

"I first met Stanley Shaw in the courtroom a number of years ago when he and I represented opposing sides in a case. I found him to be a brilliant and tenacious attorney. Since then, I have come to know him as an equally brilliant and tenacious advocate for countless worthwhile causes He is a good man to have on your side-and I am grateful that he has been on mine. Stan is truly an exceptional New Yorker, and his story is a compelling one." - George E. Pataki, Governor of the State of New York

"From the halls of an orphanage to the offices of America's most influential people, J. Stanley Shaw's life story reads like the quintessential American dream. His remarkable professional career has been characterized by integrity, decency and a commitment to what he believes is right and just. I have relied on him as a close political advisor and confidant and can attribute a great many of my campaign successes to his involvement. I hold J. Stanley Shaw in the highest esteem, not only for his sharp mind and keen instincts, but most important, for his friendship. - H. Carl McCall, Comptroller of the State of New York.

"Stanley Shaw has contributed enormously to New York's communal, political and business life. In a long career of service, he has combined great intelligence, street smarts and a passion for fairness. His principled combativeness should serve as a role model for all those interested in helping others through public service." - Alan Hevesi, Comptroller of the City of New York

"Stanley and Doris have been touched by their son Jeffrey's lifelong disability. Their love and energy have changed his life and the lives of many others with disabilities. What do you get when you mix political savvy with a big heart? Stanley and Doris Shaw!" - Aaron Liebowitz, Executive Director, Association for Adults and Children with Learning and Developmental Disabilities.

"During the last eighteen years that Stanley Shaw has appeared before me as an attorney, he has won my greatest respect and admiration. The life story readers find in I Rest My Case clearly mirrors the author's successful battles with tremendous adversity. I am proud and fortunate to be counted among his many friends and admirers." - Conrad B. Duberstein, Chief Bankruptcy Judge of the U.S. Eastern District Court of New York

"A thoughtful, brilliant, and sentimental man, Stanley Shaw gives us in I Rest My Case insights into what has made him a legal genius, loving husband and a benefactor to countless charities and individuals. He is a true leader who has led with his heart as well as his mind." - Bill McBride, managing partner, Holland & Knight LLP


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 342 pages
  • Publisher: Chestnut Street Press (January 18, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 096777960X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0967779607
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #5,037,692 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Peter Golden is an award-winning journalist and the author of six full-length works of non-fiction and fiction.

Some of Peter Golden's work has appeared in the Detroit Free Press Magazine, Albany Times Union, New Jersey Monthly, Microsoft's eDirections, Beyond Computing, Electronic Business, Midstream, The Forward, and Capital Region Magazine.

Golden's Quiet Diplomat, a biography of industrialist and political-insider Max M. Fisher made the Detroit Free Press bestseller list. Among those he interviewed were Presidents Nixon, Ford, Reagan, and Bush; Secretaries of State Kissinger, Haig, and Shultz; and Israeli Prime Ministers Shamir, Peres, and Rabin.

With J. Stanley Shaw, Golden wrote, I Rest My Case: My Long Journey from the Castle on the Hill to Home, a memoir that chronicles Shaw's life from his childhood years under the supervision of the Brooklyn Hebrew Orphan Asylum in the 1930s to his career as one of the preeminent bankruptcy attorneys in the United States.

Golden's O Powerful Western Star, a history of the Cold War, will be published in the fall of 2011. For that book, Golden re-interviewed Henry Kissinger, George Shultz, and other world leaders, including Mikhail Gorbachev.

Golden's novel, Comeback Love, will be published the first week of November 2010.

For more on Peter Golden visit http://www.petergolden.com/

 

Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
2.8 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars GUARDIANSHIP-GOOD OR BAD...SHAW,LICITRA,ESERNIO, February 27, 2004
By 
Leo Fioriono (Denver, Colorado) - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Rest My Case (Hardcover)
In 1994, Mike DeLano, my best friend of more than 50 years, suffered a minor stroke. This excuse was used to declare Mike "incapacitated" when his immediate family began to fight over Mike's assets. George Esernio of Shaw, Licitra, Esernio, Schwartz & Bohner, along with Mike's wife Kathryn, were "appointed" as co-guardians of Mike's estate by Judge Frank S Rossetti, who himself is "appointed" by Governor Pataki, a staunch political supporter and personal friend of Stanley Shaw and his firm. A coincidence, I don't think so.

Co-guardians George Esernio and Kathryn DeLano, Mike's wife, after stealing everything they could before legally marshalling over four-million dollars in tax-free municipal bonds. You know, the kind you just need to clip the coupons on for the rest of your life and, would net a person nearly 2-3 hundred thousand dollars a year in income. Well, they began by spending eight-hundred thousand in their first year causing bonds to be cashed in, thereby not only reducing principal, but the interest that Mike's bank accounts should receive in income. Throughout the next ten-years, despite objections the entire time from Mike's eldest son Franklin, the excessive spending continued until Mike's money was nearly all gone. Sadly but much richer, Mike's wife and her co-guardian attorney George Esernio, who now needed a big influx of cash to keep the excessive fees and other expenses being paid, not very surprisingly, decided to sell Mike's buildings and land in Queens that he and Franklin had built with their own hands over a period of forty years. Whew, another couple of million of Mike's money to spend on themselves for a few more years before they need to sell the next building. Oh, did I forget to mention that those buildings that Mike built contained other businesses' that Mike owned that were also adding income to Mike's estate for fifty-years. Too bad his wife Kathryn and George Esernio, who charged more in fees than Mike himself ever took in salary, went bust from "mis-management".

So it would appear that Mr. Shaw and his firm are not Saints or knights in shining armor but instead, a bunch of crooks. At least in this example. Want to know more, call Franklin of the NBGAG (National Bad Guardianship Advocacy Group)at (406) 825-5040 or (406)628-4862 or go look up Index No. 24309-I-93 in the Nassau County Courthouse located at 240 Old Country Rd. in Mineola, NY. and be ready for the guardianship shock of your life!

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1.0 out of 5 stars SUCH A CROOK, February 27, 2004
By 
Leo Fioriono (Denver, Colorado) - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Rest My Case (Hardcover)
I have personally witnessed Shaw's law firm in action. They suck. I saw one instance where they took millions of dollars from my childhood friend and charged hundreds of thousands in legal fees for simply clipping coupons and for instigating problems of an already dysfunctional family.
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1.0 out of 5 stars PLEASE! Say it ain't so..., February 27, 2004
By 
randolph scott (Long Island, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Rest My Case (Hardcover)
Is this the same Shaw that has a law firm on Long Island known as Shaw, Licitra, Esernio, Bohner & Schwartz? The one that receives so much praise, patronage and rewards from the heirarchy of people in power? If you need a lawyer or firm with influence and crooked political connections, this one is among the top ten.
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