| + + | Bookm. 24: 484. Ja. ’07. 840w. |
“Although thoroughly serious in purpose, he lightens his chapters with amusing anecdote and thus gives us an entertaining as well as a strikingly suggestive book.”
| + | Dial. 42: 291. My. 1, ’07. 200w. |
“Let no one think that because Mr. Train has written a book lightly readable and brimming with humor that it has no significance.”
| + | Ind. 62: 1269. My. 30. ’07. 360w. | |
| + | Lit. D. 34: 64. Ja. 12, ’07. 100w. |
“An instructive and interesting account of the actual administration of criminal law in the largest of American cities.”
| + + | Lond. Times. 6: 202. Je. 28, ’07. 1010w. |
“A set of most interesting sidelights on the actual administration of criminal justice in our large cities. The voice is the voice of the expert, though the hand is rather that of the journalist.”
| + | Nation. 84: 133. F. 7, ’07. 250w. |
“The book as a whole belongs to the same class as Mr. Francis Wellman’s ‘Art of cross-examination.’”