Rachel Thompson

Jack Canon's American Destiny

Thursday, December 19, 2013

#AmReading - Model Agent by Sean Sweeney @SMSweeneyAuthor

Model Agent by Sean Sweeney

Amazon

The human body consists of two-thirds water.
As concertgoers on a steamy day in Boston find out, water can kill as much as it gives life.
A terrorist attack at City Hall Plaza has the authorities perplexed. The government, in response, sends in a capable but young agent – an agent born from the ashes of terrorism itself – to handle it.
But as her partner dies and the terrorist strikes again, Jaclyn Johnson – code named Snapshot – finds herself in a situation she has trained a decade to face: She’s up against a man with enough money to finance a war against his competition. With a deadline in place to stop him – and with a car holding enough hidden tricks to evade capture – Snapshot infiltrates his hidden installation and finds out her target’s true end game, a secret that could have the world fighting over water.

William Louis Harvey – Why I Wrote Malpractice @sexandlawnovel

For years, William Louis Harvey recalled the details of cases that he had reviewed as an expert witness, chair of a malpractice review committee, and as a treating physician. Noticing that nobody else had written about this important time in medical and legal history, he set out to accurately describe it.

Efforts to put limits on the size of monetary awards by  juries in  malpractice  cases went on for years, finally resulting in what is now known as Tort Reform. California did this in 1975, with the passage of the Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act (MICRA), which could be a model for tort reform.

Like any good writer, when Harvey began to develop and write the life stories of the three main characters in Malpractice the Novel, they became real to him. He found that some of the material seemed to  “write itself”. Included in this, was a sexual history for the characters, which he felt was integral. Just as he began to question how sexually explicit to be in his book, Harvey read an essay by Katie Roiphe positing that the current generation of male novelists avoid incorporating sex into their novels. It was then that Harvey decided to “try to return sex to the American novel”, but with “redeeming social value”.

Malpractice_Cover_sansback1

Malpractice! the Novel is an electrifying work of realistic fiction written by an anonymous insider who worked the frontlines of the clash between the medical and legal professions during the California medical malpractice insurance crisis, which began in the 1960s. William Louis Harvey, a nom de plume, takes readers on a steamy adventure involving power, sex, lies and money in this candid courtroom suspense thriller. While Malpractice! The Novel, is a work of fiction, it is rooted in the personal experiences and firsthand knowledge the author acquired during his decades of working inside the medical industry. California in the 1960s and first half of the 1970s had already seen a dramatic increase in medical malpractice lawsuits as juries awarded progressively higher sums for “pain and suffering,” a category that had no concrete limits and caused physicians’ insurance premiums for malpractice to skyrocket. Harvey chaired a committee that reviewed all malpractice claims involving a major California hospital during the crisis. Details of some of the cases he experienced are engraved in his memory, and small portions of these tidbits find their way into Malpractice! the Novel, his first novel. Roused by a recent New York Times article about the American male novelist’s fear of addressing sexuality, Harvey interleaved honest sex histories for his novel’s characters, adding a titillating sensuality to the suspenseful novel.

Buy Now @ Amazon

Genre – Steamy Courtroom Drama

Rating – R

More details about the author

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