Adverse Reaction
A Novel · 2025 · Auctorem HouseHe swore he’d never set foot in a courtroom again.
Four years after vanishing from the legal world, trial lawyer Mitchell Redden is pulled back in by a beautiful single mother and a malformed child. The case looks winnable. Then the bodies start dropping — and Redden realizes the killer’s list isn’t finished.
“This book was hard to put down because there were so many answers that I was searching for.”
“I would love to see this as a TV series: the viewer will be biting their nails at the end of each episode!”
“Halfway through, it is impossible to stop reading and find out what is really going on underneath it all.”
“As the chapters progress, the tension increases, making it hard to stop and pushing me to go for just ‘one more chapter’.”
What if a small daily tablet could prevent tens of thousands of birth defects every year — and the FDA looked the other way?
A thirty-year courtroom odyssey from the trial attorney who took on the manufacturer of CLOMID eight separate times. Falsified records. Deceptive labeling. Ignored FDA warnings. And the malformed children whose families paid the price for a regulatory system that protects the wrong people.
Gold Medal · 2010 Independent Publisher Book Awards · Silver · 2009 Nautilus Book Awards · Silver · 2010 Foreword Magazine Book of the Year · 3× Finalist · 2008 National Best Books Awards
230,000 Americans die every year from prescription drugs. You were never told. There’s a reason.
A trial attorney’s exposé on the broken system of drug testing and FDA oversight that turns ordinary patients into unwitting test subjects. Names. Numbers. Documents. And a roadmap for how 100,000 lives and $100 billion could be saved every year — if anyone in Washington wanted to.
Silver · 2013 Nautilus Book Awards · Finalist · 2012 Foreword Magazine Book of the Year · Honorable Mention · New York · New England · Los Angeles · London Book Festivals
Dr. Aaron Feinerman knows he is dying. He is the only doctor in the hospital who does.
A prominent surgeon dies after a routine operation at his own hospital. The autopsy stinks of cover-up. The widow wants justice. And the young malpractice lawyer who takes the case is about to learn that some murders are planned at the highest levels of the United States government — and some questions get brilliant young lawyers killed.