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Unsolicited praise

  • “Great work – and on schedule!…Your FAQ’s set a new standard, I think, in clarity and ease of reading of tax help.”
    – Dan Caine, Tax Technical Officer, FreeTaxPrep.com; CEO, Split-Up.com
  • “Thank you very much for getting back to us so quickly. Nice job!…I certainly feel more comfortable that our [privacy] policy is easier to read and understand now.”
    – Heather Marks, Communications Manager, KeyCorp
  • “You are amazing! We are very grateful indeed to you for your skilled and perceptive editing assistance….”
    – Gene Sharp, Acting President, The Albert Einstein Institution

Ken Bresler’s publicationsThe Workplace Writing Workbook

Kissing Legalese Goodbye

Twain-book8-30Conl-law-textbook8-30

    • Articles and commentaries on urban life and public art for Washingtonian Magazine, The Improper Bostonian, The Boston Tab, The Cambridge (Mass.) Chronicle, and The (Miami) Wave.
    • Articles on law and lawyers for The National Law Journal, The American Bar Association Journal, The Miami Herald, The Miami Review, The Florida Bar JournalThe New York Law Journal, Legal Times, The Chicago Daily Law Bulletin, Massachusetts Lawyers Journal, Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly, Rhode Island Lawyers Weekly, Virginia Lawyers Weekly, South Carolina Lawyers WeeklyThe Daily Record (New York State), Legal News (Detroit), The Vocabula Review, and Pharmaceutical Executive.
    • A total of six academic articles, written in plain English, for The Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics, The New England Law Review, and The Criminal Law Bulletin.
    • Citizen’s Guide to Drafting Legislation, published by the Massachusetts Secretary of State. Massachusetts’s first legislative drafting manual.
    • Citizen’s Primer on Town Meetings, published by the Massachusetts Secretary of State. Massachusetts’s first statewide publication explaining how to participate in town meetings.

About Ken Bresler

Ken Bresler is a graduate of Harvard Law School. He has written about 60 appellate briefs. He has taught advanced legal writing at Northeastern University Law School.

Please note

Ken Bresler offers his services as a consultant, not a lawyer. Communications with him are not protected by attorney-client privilege.