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Consumer Transactions (University Casebook Series)

Consumer Transactions (University Casebook Series)Author: Michael M. Greenfield
Publisher: Foundation Press
Category: Book

List Price: $157.00
Buy New: $120.54
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You Save: $36.46 (23%)

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New (7) Used (8) from $104.41

Seller: Amazon.com
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 688,791

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 5
Pages: 950
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.1
Dimensions (in): 10 x 7.7 x 1.7

ISBN: 1599413345
Dewey Decimal Number: 346
EAN: 9781599413341
ASIN: 1599413345

Publication Date: December 2, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Consumer transactions (University casebook series)
  • Paperback - Consumer Transactions (University casebook series)
  • Hardcover - Consumer Transactions (University Casebook Series)
  • Paperback - Consumer Transactions: Guide for Teachers
  • Hardcover - Consumer Transactions (University Casebook)
  • Hardcover - Greenfield's Consumer Transactions, 3d (University Casebook Series®)

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
An ideal casebook for students in consumer transactions courses. It contains extensive and systematic coverage of the federal and state statutes that govern such consumer transactions as automobile sales and finance, home mortgages, predatory lending, and others. The text makes frequent use of problems as a teaching device.


Customer Reviews:
5 out of 5 stars Consumer Transactions   February 19, 2007
Brenda L. Leaton
0 out of 2 found this review helpful

Excellent COndition; I would guess brand new, and for about 75% of the cost at my school's bookstore.


2 out of 5 stars Greenfield's Ending a Letdown   February 26, 2004
Jeffrey Basinger (Kansas City, MO United States)
4 out of 12 found this review helpful

Michael Greenfield makes an admirable attempt build to expose the reading public to a new type prose that utilizes many different conflicts and characters while also detailing much technical information regarding the law. However, Greenfield apparently has bit off more than he can chew since his novel simply does not tie his many expository strands together in a satisfying ending.
The reader is exposed to hundreds of characters and businesses that have all been involved in separate disputes regarding their separate consumer transactions, but these individual consumer never unite for love or conversation or play or any other type of meaningful exchange. Greenfield seems to view the world as one where people are atomized and isolated. He shows how they communicate through complex and impersonal legal and commercial systems. The reader is left waiting to see if any particular persons are able to use the human spirit in order to break out of this Foucault-esque prison of a society and interact live together in a deeper way.
However, Greenfield offers now such hope. The novel's ending leaves the characters where Greenfield found them: alone and caught in the tangle of a complex, bureaucratic world. While Greenfield may one day fully articulate the themes he draws on in "Consumer Transactions", he right now offers no more than a cynical, mechanical worldview that leaves both his readers and characters both unfulfilled.



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