“LaRue is interested not in the simple claim that meaning is constructed, but in demonstrating the particular ways in which judicial writers create meaning in particular cases, and how in doing so they succeed, or fail, in creating the grounds of their own authority. . . . LaRue opens up a new set of questions and concerns, which should be of great value to lawyers, judges, and others interested in constitutional law, or law more generally.”—James Boyd White, Author of The Legal Imagination