OASP Books of Interest
- John Delaney, Learning Legal Reasoning: Briefing, Analysis and Theory, John Delaney Publications, 1987.
- John Delaney, How to Do Your Best on Law School Exams, John Delaney Publications, 2001.
- Richard Michael Fischl and Jeremy Paul, Getting to Maybe: How to Excel on Law School Exams, Carolina Academic Press, 1999.
- Wilson R. Huhn, The 5 Types of Legal Argument, Carolina Academic Press, Second Edition, 2008.
- Margaret Z. Johns and Rex r. Perschbacher, The United States Legal System: An Introduction, Carolina Academic Press, 2002.
- Andrew J. McClurg, 1L of a Ride: A Well-Traveled Professor's Roadmap to Success in the First Year of Law School, Thomson-West, 2009.
- Ruth McKinney, Reading Like a Laawyer: Time-Saving Strategies for Reading Law Like an Expert, Carolina Academic Press, 2005.
- James E. Moliterno and Fredric I. Lederer, An Introduction to Law, Law Study, and the Lawyer's Role, Carolina Academic Press, Third Edition, 2010.
- Herb Ramy, Succeeding in Law School, Carolina Academic Press, Second Edition, 2010.
- Denise Riebe and Michael Hunter Schwartz, Pass the Bar!, Carolina Academic Press, 2006.
- Linda Sapadin with Jack Maguire, Beat Procrastination and Make the Grade: The Six Styles of Procrastination and How Students Can Overcome Them, Penguin Books, 1999.
- Michael Hunter Schwartz, Expert Learning for Law Students, Carolina Academic Press, Second Edition, 2008.
- Peter N. Simon, Anatomy of a Law Suit, Matthew Bender, 1996.
- Ruta K. Stropus and Charlotte D. Taylor, Bridging the Gap between College and Law School, Carolina Academic Press, Second Edition, 2009.
- Dennis J. Tonsing, 1000 Days to the Bar: But the Practice of Law Begins Now, William S. Hein and Co., Second Edition, 2010.
