Don't Miss This VERY Special Black Friday Offer
CNN Reporter Says the Quiet Part Out Loud About Afghans and the National...
Do Something About Prices, Republicans, Or You’re Going To Lose
Democrats Never Let a Crisis Go to Waste
Zohran Mamdani's Still Begging Working Class New Yorkers for Money
'Closed in Its Entirety:' President Trump Issues Warning About Venezuelan Airspace
Being Thankful Also After Thanksgiving
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 296: What the Bible Says About Gifts
Democrat Leadership is Sinister, Not Misguided
Texas Authorities Arrest Afghan Immigrant Accused of Posting Bomb Threat Online
Northwestern to Pay $75M, Enact Major Policy Reforms Under Federal Anti-Discrimination Dea...
Audio Company Harman to Pay $11.8M for Evading U.S. Duties on Chinese Aluminum...
State Department Pauses Afghan Passport Visas After D.C. Terrorist Shooting
Colombian National Sentenced to 60 Months for Laundering $1.2M in Drug Proceeds
Pregnancy Resource Centers Should Be Able to Operate Free From Government Intimidation
Tipsheet

How Antonin Scalia Changed America's Courts Forever

Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia was an icon for conservatives and for conservative jurists inspired by his originalist approach to constitutional law. Bryan Garner was a lifelong friend of Scalia’s, and a fellow jurist.

Advertisement

In his new book Nino and Me, readers are treated to the warm side of Scalia the public rarely got to see. We interviewed Garner, and asked him about Scalia, their work, and its effects on constitutional law. Read it below!

Congratulations Bryan Garner on your new book, Nino and Me: My Unusual Friendship with Justice Antonin Scalia! Tell us about your new book.

It’s a heartfelt memoir of my ten-year writing partnership with Justice Scalia. It’s a book about friendship, literary collaboration, and the last ten years in the life of probably the most interesting man in the world.

What inspired you to write it?

Garner: Our ten years’ worth of adventures were so interesting—and our stories were so revelatory of this great man’s character—that I couldn’t imagine taking them with me to the grave.

What are two or three things people may not have known about Justice Scalia?

How fun-loving he was, how principled he was, and how much integrity he had.

What do you believe, ultimately, will be his legacy, not just for the U.S. Supreme Court, but for the conservative movement and the United States?

Advertisement

Garner: Justice Scalia changed the legal landscape by making textualism and originalism mainstream in American judging—especially when it comes to statutes. He didn’t always carry the day on constitutional questions, but originalism has mostly been adhered to with the First, Second, Fourth, and Eighth Amendments.

I’m proud that our joint work Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts has helped promote textualism and originalism. Today American appellate courts rely on that book—and cite it in their opinions—about a dozen times each month.

Tell us a little more about yourself and your professional background and Black’s Law Dictionary!

I’m a fourth-generation Texan, the grandson of a Texas Supreme Court justice. I fell in love with words and dictionaries when I was 15, and I’ve been a lexicographer ever since. My first book, a dictionary published by Oxford University Press, appeared when I was 28. And I’ve written a good deal about English grammar and usage.

These interests were nurtured during my undergraduate career at the University of Texas, and then I enrolled in UT Law—where as an editor of the law review I became interested in jurisprudence. I clerked for a federal appellate judge, then practiced law for several years before entering academia. Then I turned entrepreneurial when I formed my own continuing-legal-education company.

Advertisement

Meanwhile, I’ve never stopped working on my dictionaries. In 1995, I was asked to become editor in chief of Black’s Law Dictionary, the most widely cited law book in the world, and I’ve done four massive revisions of that 2,000-page book. Like James A.H. Murray, the original editor of the Oxford English Dictionary, I have a scriptorium in my backyard where most of my lexicographic work is done. I have a personal library of 36,000 volumes, which I use in my scholarship. Justice Scalia and I loved working together in my library.

Learn more about Antonin Scalia, Bryan Garner and his new book Nino & Me at the Conservative Book Club!

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement