Happy Hour Is for Amateurs: A Lost Decade in the World’s Worst Profession
Philadelphia Lawyer, . . Morrow, $23.95 (305pp) ISBN 978-0-06-134949-2
In this nihilistic memoir, the author, creator of the Philadelphia Lawyer blog, addresses both the bankruptcy of the American legal system and his own predilection for substance abuse. His pseudonym, he says, refers both to the city where the author practiced and to a disparaging term for an unscrupulous lawyer. A former frat boy, the author entered law school for lack of better ideas only to find that the material bored him and his studies interfered with getting drunk. Still, he persisted, and his quest for big money led him through criminal law, civil litigation and personal injury law. Although he never gets rich, he is able to ingest large quantities of drugs in the company of equally debauched friends. The author writes with intermittent brio, and his critiques of his profession are pointed and astute. However, the endless tales of sleazy sex and drunken escapades might go over well with bar-stool buddies, but on the page they make a depressing blur. Other people barely seem to exist for him: of his future wife we learn little more than that she has a “dancer’s ass” and “amazing nipples.” With a lot more empathy and self-awareness, the author might have created a devastating portrayal of the current debasement of the American professional classes.
Reviewed on: 08/25/2008
Genre: Nonfiction