Stevens, ex-colleagues took different paths in retirement
WASHINGTON — Retired Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens never really put down his pen. Without opinions and dissents to write following his retirement from the Supreme Court in 2010, Stevens chose instead to write books from his home in Florida, reflecting on his life but also the Constitution.
Stevens, who died last week at 99 and will lie in repose at the court Monday, published his first book in retirement the year after he left the court. The memoir, “Five Chiefs,” reflected on the five Supreme Court chief justices he had served under or known. A second book, “Six Amendments: How and Why We Should Change the Constitution,” followed in 2014. And his most recent book, an autobiography, came out in May, just a month after his most recent birthday.
Stevens had been particularly outspoken recently on the topic of gun control. In “Six Amendments” he called for changing the Constitution’s Second Amendment to permit gun control. Last year, after marches following the school shooting in Parkland, Florida, in which 17 people died, Stevens wrote an essay for The New York Times calling not only for significant gun control legislation but also the Second Amendment’s repeal .
Also last year he came out against Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation following Kavanaugh’s angry denial of sexual assault allegations.