For far too long, scholarship on the Supreme Court of the United States has lacked a systematic assessment of the jurisprudence and impact of Justice Stevens across a range of legal issues. Fortunately, Professor Smith not only answers this call, he does so with an engaging style that does not sacrifice nuance or intellectual rigor. Smith employs multiple lenses to reveal Stevens’s fact-based, case-by-case approach to considering questions regarding Miranda rights, jury trials, search and seizure protections, and capital punishment. The author’s informative, personal interviews with the justice complement illuminating discussions of Stevens’s earlier experiences and detailed analyses of the jurist’s later opinions on the Supreme Court. The result is a rich depiction of Stevens’s criminal justice jurisprudence as complex and consistent, without being ideologically reflexive. As the definitive examination of one of the Court’s most influential members in cases addressing the rights of prisoners and of the criminally accused, John Paul Stevens: Defender of Rights in Criminal Justice deserves a prominent place on the bookshelf for those interested in criminal justice, constitutional interpretation, or public law.