When Judge Charles Harris QC retired in 2017, he was the most
experienced and longest-serving member of England's cadre of civil
judges. After 26 years as a Barrister, he spent 24 years as a Circuit
Judge, working in Oxford, the Midlands and London, and has dealt with
every kind of dispute, from dangerous animals and negligent doctors to
the sale of the Ritz Hotel. During this time the law has become steadily
more complex, more expensive and harder to use. It is now often
impossible for ordinary people to understand, and sometimes hard for
judges. This attractively-written book, depicting the texture of
judicial life, shows how this has happened, and asks why nothing is done
about it. Besides revealing the judicial world, this book is also an
entertaining memoir of life outside the law. The author describes his
post-war childhood and education, standing for Parliament, ballooning in
India, encounters in Africa, skiing in the Alps, learning to fly,
deerstalking, fireworks, and his family and friends in rural North
Oxfordshire