Antonin Scalia served as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1986 until his death in 2016. Antonin Scalia was married to Maureen for fifty-five years. Together they had nine children and dozens of grandchildren. Jeffrey S. Sutton, a judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, is a former law clerk to Justice Scalia. He is the author of 51 Imperfect Solutions- States and the Making of American Constitutional Law. Edward Whelan, president of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, is a former law clerk to Justice Scalia. He co-edited two other collections of Justice Scalia's work, Scalia Speaks- Reflections on Law, Faith, and Life Well Lived and On Faith- Lessons from an American Believer.
If you know a student who has recently started or returned to law school, you might want to give that aspiring lawyer a short volume of supplemental . . . reading about our Constitution and legal tradition. . . . You can do your part by sharing with them this latest and perhaps most subversive collection. -National Review The editors of The Essential Scalia have skillfully collected and excerpted Scalia's judicial writings and a few speeches and articles, and the results are as readable today as they were when they first appeared. That is no mean feat. . . . What makes so many of his opinions worth reading and rereading is not what they say about a particular statute or constitutional dispute but what they say about statutory construction or constitutional interpretation in general. . . . The book will be especially illuminating to anyone who wants to unlock the mystery of why [Justice Ruth Bader] Ginsburg admired Scalia-or who wants to get a sense of where the Supreme Court may be headed. -The Wall Street Journal It would be difficult to name other Supreme Court justices who have had such a galvanizing effect on American politics-and who continued to play such important roles after their deaths. . . . What comes across most . . . is the quality of Scalia's writing. It is clear, direct, witty, lapidary, memorable. Scalia's opinions and dissents are famous for certain lines-'this wolf comes as a wolf'; 'What Is Golf?'-but on second reading it is the way he develops his argument that most impresses. And he always makes a perfect landing. . . . These aren't judicial decisions. They are essays. And like great literature they will reverberate far into the future. -The Washington Free Beacon