*/
Chance, Cheek and Some Heroics
Author: Frederic Reynold QC
Publisher: Wildy, Simmonds & Hill (February 2018)
ISBN: 9780854902446
Frederic Reynold QC – ‘Freddy’ to his friends, of whom there are many – has written a memoir of his life as a barrister. Now past 80, but undimmed by the years, Reynold is something of a legend at the Bar, renowned for his warmth, wit and forensic prowess.
His career started in the early 1960s and the variety of his work over the ensuing decades is remarkable to the contemporary barrister. In the first 20 years of his practice he was combining commercial, landlord and tenant, compulsory purchase, and common law work in a whirligig of activity. Still, Reynold’s pre-eminence at the Bar was eventually to be founded on his work in the fields of trade union, employment and discrimination law.
In any memoir by a non-criminal barrister there is always the lurking danger of abstruseness. Accounts of criminal cases have universal appeal and a ready readership; not necessarily so stories from the Queen’s Bench Division. Nonetheless, here is a book which is genuinely fascinating in its account of life at the Bar as well as its recreation of the legal battlegrounds of the past. Reynold is endowed with a natural narrative ability, assisted by humour, crispness and elegance.
His life has not been that of the typical post-war barrister. He was born in Danzig and was fortunately brought to England in August 1939. Without the usual connections, through determination and hard work he read law at Magdalen College in the mid-fifties. One feels that his mother, who shepherded him on his way, was a force to be reckoned with. His account of childhood and development into adulthood is both affecting and historically perceptive. Life at Magdalen during its golden age is dwelt on at some length, and rightly so: Reynold’s account of his friendships there is a compendium of many of the great names of the last 50 years. In fact one feels that an even longer account would be merited – a sort of 1950s equivalent to Acton’s Memoirs of an Aesthete – and one hopes that Reynold could be persuaded to pick up his pen again.
Reynold’s search for a pupillage (much of it spent working on Rookes v Barnard) and establishment in practice details the vast gulf that separates the haphazard past from the rules-based present. His survey of life at the Bar is punctuated by insightful pen portraits of the judges and barristers he has encountered. Lord Denning is vividly delineated; as is a young Cherie Booth. The passages devoted to his experience as a junior to a drunk and distracted George Carman are both nerve-wracking and priceless.
It is a commonplace that legal memoirs have more of self-adulation than perceptiveness about them. Yet this book stands out from the crowd. Reynold’s charm and sensitivity of description provide a delightful account of a life vigorously lived.
Reviewer Thomas Grant QC is a barrister at Maitland Chambers.
Frederic Reynold QC – ‘Freddy’ to his friends, of whom there are many – has written a memoir of his life as a barrister. Now past 80, but undimmed by the years, Reynold is something of a legend at the Bar, renowned for his warmth, wit and forensic prowess.
His career started in the early 1960s and the variety of his work over the ensuing decades is remarkable to the contemporary barrister. In the first 20 years of his practice he was combining commercial, landlord and tenant, compulsory purchase, and common law work in a whirligig of activity. Still, Reynold’s pre-eminence at the Bar was eventually to be founded on his work in the fields of trade union, employment and discrimination law.
In any memoir by a non-criminal barrister there is always the lurking danger of abstruseness. Accounts of criminal cases have universal appeal and a ready readership; not necessarily so stories from the Queen’s Bench Division. Nonetheless, here is a book which is genuinely fascinating in its account of life at the Bar as well as its recreation of the legal battlegrounds of the past. Reynold is endowed with a natural narrative ability, assisted by humour, crispness and elegance.
His life has not been that of the typical post-war barrister. He was born in Danzig and was fortunately brought to England in August 1939. Without the usual connections, through determination and hard work he read law at Magdalen College in the mid-fifties. One feels that his mother, who shepherded him on his way, was a force to be reckoned with. His account of childhood and development into adulthood is both affecting and historically perceptive. Life at Magdalen during its golden age is dwelt on at some length, and rightly so: Reynold’s account of his friendships there is a compendium of many of the great names of the last 50 years. In fact one feels that an even longer account would be merited – a sort of 1950s equivalent to Acton’s Memoirs of an Aesthete – and one hopes that Reynold could be persuaded to pick up his pen again.
Reynold’s search for a pupillage (much of it spent working on Rookes v Barnard) and establishment in practice details the vast gulf that separates the haphazard past from the rules-based present. His survey of life at the Bar is punctuated by insightful pen portraits of the judges and barristers he has encountered. Lord Denning is vividly delineated; as is a young Cherie Booth. The passages devoted to his experience as a junior to a drunk and distracted George Carman are both nerve-wracking and priceless.
It is a commonplace that legal memoirs have more of self-adulation than perceptiveness about them. Yet this book stands out from the crowd. Reynold’s charm and sensitivity of description provide a delightful account of a life vigorously lived.
Reviewer Thomas Grant QC is a barrister at Maitland Chambers.
Chance, Cheek and Some Heroics
Author: Frederic Reynold QC
Publisher: Wildy, Simmonds & Hill (February 2018)
ISBN: 9780854902446
Kirsty Brimelow KC, Chair of the Bar, sets our course for 2026
What meaningful steps can you take in 2026 to advance your legal career? asks Thomas Cowan of St Pauls Chambers
Marie Law, Director of Toxicology at AlphaBiolabs, explains why drugs may appear in test results, despite the donor denying use of them
Asks Louise Crush of Westgate Wealth Management
AlphaBiolabs has donated £500 to The Christie Charity through its Giving Back initiative, helping to support cancer care, treatment and research across Greater Manchester, Cheshire and further afield
Q and A with criminal barrister Nick Murphy, who moved to New Park Court Chambers on the North Eastern Circuit in search of a better work-life balance
The appointments of 96 new King’s Counsel (also known as silk) are announced today
With pupillage application season under way, Laura Wright reflects on her route to ‘tech barrister’ and offers advice for those aiming at a career at the Bar
Jury-less trial proposals threaten fairness, legitimacy and democracy without ending the backlog, writes Professor Cheryl Thomas KC (Hon), the UK’s leading expert on juries, judges and courts
Are you ready for the new way to do tax returns? David Southern KC explains the biggest change since HMRC launched self-assessment more than 30 years ago... and its impact on the Bar
Marking one year since a Bar disciplinary tribunal dismissed all charges against her, Dr Charlotte Proudman discusses the experience, her formative years and next steps. Interview by Anthony Inglese CB