/ Winning With Stories: Using the Narrative to Persuade in Trials, Sppeches & Lectures

Winning With Stories: Using the Narrative to Persuade in Trials, Speeches & Lectures

Jim M. Perdue

 

© 2006

hardcover, 7 x 10, 601 pages

ISBN 978-1-892542-22-9

$97

 

Once upon a time . . .

So begins Winning with Stories: Using the Narrative to Persuade in Trials, Speeches & Lectures
, an examination of the power of the story in the art of persuasion. In this eminently readable work of sound scholarship, author Jim M. Perdue proves that the story, as our primary vehicle for learning and teaching, is as valid today as it was to our ancient ancestors. “Stories reaffirm our belief that our institutions exist as solutions to problems,” writes Perdue. “Stories deny the proposition that life can only admit to hopelessness and uncertainty. Since the beginning of time, narratives have carried the truths of hope and justice.”

Beginning with an exploration of the story concept, Perdue analyzes narrative elements in detail, showing how to craft a story with a strong beginning, memorable scenes, believable characters, a logical plot, vivid action, and a moving conclusion. Going beyond these basics, Perdue demonstrates how to tell the story to maximum effect, with attention to concepts as broad as giving “soul” to the story and as specific as what the speaker should wear. Mannerisms, physical movement, use of illustrative visuals, and other storytelling considerations are covered in detail. The author gives generously of his more than forty years of courtroom experience to show novice and veteran lawyers alike how to tell a powerful story to motivate an audience.

Far more than a practical analysis of storytelling, Winning with Stories is also an invaluable anthology of stories that speakers can use to make and illustrate a point. Included are abundant examples of useful labels, metaphors, similes, clichés, analogies, quotations, poetry, personal anecdotes, and humorous stories, traced to their roots in ancient and modern history, the Bible, children’s tales, books, movies, plays, and folklore. Rounding out these invaluable resources are illustrative examples of actual opening statements and closing arguments the author has used to inspire juries to a just verdict.

Like Perdue’s previous books, Winning with Stories will be an indispensable reference for the trial lawyer seeking more effective persuasion techniques and an invaluable tool for lecturers, ministers, and teachers—anyone who studies or practices the art of persuasion.

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Praise for Winning with Stories: Using the Narrative to Persuade in Trials, Speeches & Lectures


Jim M. Perdue has put on paper what makes him a courtroom legend. This is the best guide yet on how to persuade judges and juries. Read it, study it, follow its step-by-step approach, and you are guaranteed to become a better trial lawyer. This is a book every lawyer needs to own.

If you read this book with your own cases in mind, I guarantee you will find more winning ways of showing your juries why they must decide the story your case presents in your favor. But it’s not just trial lawyers who need to read this book. Teachers and all public speakers who care about their audience and their topic should also read and absorb its simple yet profound message: you can persuade an audience far better and move your listeners more deeply with a story than with an argument.
Perdue’s big-as-all-outdoors book doesn’t just give us formulas and checklists, it also mines deeply into literature and culture to show how the great stories of the last few thousand years have worked their persuasive magic. This is a book to read and savor, and refer to over and over.
This book is an amazingly useful tool for any communicator. Within the first two chapters, I found myself analyzing my next Sunday’s sermon, asking, “Have I stated my point in a vivid way, or an inert one? Will my congregation learn, remember, and be inspired?” A bible of the art of trial, Winning with Stories cuts the learning curve for young lawyers by ten or fifteen years.

A must read for all litigators who want to win, and should be a required text for all who study or practice persuasion.
The power of story is as old as humans and fire, and the fire of Jim Perdue comes through the pages of this book. It is an outstanding resource. Read it—and you will be a better lawyer.

Atticus Finch surely spun some spellbinding tales for Scout and Southern juries, but even he would be envious of Mr. Perdue’s talent for storytelling and his grasp of its tradition and power. English teachers will be thrilled to find a book that analyzes storytelling and in the process explains literary devices and writing techniques and even discusses archetypal literary figures. This is a fascinating, informative book and one that English teachers could use as effectively as attorneys.
Every Jim Perdue book is on my shelf, but the new one on storytelling and analogies won’t ever have any dust settle on top…its Jim’s best work.

Jim Perdue’s collection of stories, anecdotes and quotations is a veritable treasure trove of source material for trial lawyers and public speakers. In Lincolnesque style these stories and witticisms are not only entertaining, but are replete with jewels of wisdom and historical insights.


About the Author

 

Jim M. Perdue graduated with honors from the University of Houston with a B.S. in 1961 and from the University of Houston Law Center in 1963. During his professional career, Mr. Perdue has achieved numerous million-dollar verdicts and settlements in various types of personal injury cases. One verdict—for $12 million—was, at the time it was rendered, the largest such jury verdict in a medical malpractice case in Texas. He is a member of the prestigious Inner Circle of Advocates (the top one hundred trial lawyers in the country), board certified by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization and the National Board of Trial Advocacy, and a Fellow in the American College of Trial Lawyers and the International Society of Barristers. He is named in every edition of The Best Lawyers in America. The University of Houston Law Center named him outstanding alumnus in 1977, the Texas Bar Foundation honored him with its first annual Outstanding Law Review Article Award, and he is the recipient of the State Bar of Texas’s Gene Cavin Award for excellence in continuing legal education. Mr. Perdue has authored numerous treatises on medical malpractice and products liability and has written more than forty law review and journal articles. His classic Who Will Speak for the Victim? A Practical Treatise on Plaintiff’s Jury Argument (1989) is in its fourth printing by the State Bar of Texas. More recently he edited and wrote a chapter in the book Who Speaks for Justice? (1999), and in 2004 the State Bar published his precursor to the present work, I Remember Atticus: Inspiring Stories Every Trial Lawyer Should Know.

Mr. Perdue is a partner in the Houston-based Perdue Law Firm, L.L.P.