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The ILTA community is filled with avid readers. Here are some recent recommendations.
MEMBER RESOURCES
April 11-13
LMA Annual Conference
Austin
www.lmaconference.com
April 13-16
2016 NALP Annual Education
Conference
Boston, MA
nalp.org
May 16-17
Legal Innovation and TechFest
Melbourne
techfestconf.com/legal/aus/
May 17-18
2016 LMA P3 Conference
Chicago, IL
legalmarketing.org/
p3registration
May 22-25
ALA Annual Conference and
Expo
Los Angeles
www.alanet.org
June 8-9
SharePoint || Office 365
Symposium
Baltimore, MD
sharepoint.iltanet.org
June 9-10
LegalSEC Summit
Baltimore, MD
legalsecsummit.iltanet.org
June 13
Legaltech West Coast -
Advanced IT Track
San Francisco, CA
iltanet.org
July 16-19
AALL Annual Meeting
Chicago, IL
aallnet.org/conference
August 28-September 1
ILTACON
National Harbor, MD
iltacon.org
EVENT CALENDAR
MORE ONLINE!
View a comprehensive list
of upcoming events in legal
technology on InsideLegal's
Master Events Calendar at
bit.ly/legalcalendar
Whatcha Readin'?
Lafayette in the Somewhat United States
by Sarah Vowell
This is the hilarious, serious, hysterical, well-wrien history of Lafayee and the
revolution. I loved it and learned a lot at the same time. This is one of the few reads
that has made me laugh out loud.
— Henry Chace, Burns & Levinson, LLP
The Happiness Advantage
by Shawn Achor
Focused on the science of the positive physiological outlier, this book presents
scientific evidence that happiness is a precursor to success, not the other way
around. Full of practical advice, backed up by well-explained science and told by an
author who has a wry sense of humor, there are even law-firm-specific examples. We
are focusing an entire iteration of our Vorys book club on the book. For a 10-minute
sense of what the book covers, see Shawn Achor's TED talk online.
— Brian Donato, Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease LLP
Between You & Me
by Mary Norris
Mary Norris was a long-time copy editor for The New Yorker magazine, so it's not
surprising that the subtitle of this book is "Confessions of a Comma Queen." She
loves language and grammar and tells her story of editing copy with both a strong
eye on correct usage and tidbits about the personalities who wrote, write, edited and
edit for The New Yorker. If you love the English language and superb writing, this is
a fun read.
— Henry Chace, Burns & Levinson, LLP