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Works in Progress

A Harvest of Innocence

The untold story of one attorney thrust into what became known as The West Memphis 3 murders.

  • This is the first account by a participant of what is deemed by many as one of the most blatant examples police and judicial malfeasance in American history. Many people have been asking Dan Stidham for his account of what actually happened for years. He has been unable to do so until now.

  • There are details here that have never been revealed. The book will bring the case into 2020.

  • The book will offer new information that will appeal to the thousands of hard-core followers around the word but also introduce the case to an entire generation of readers who have never heard of West Memphis 3.

  • A fresh look–no holds barred-- at how it transpired and how police and prosecutors and the judge steamrollered the defendants and got the quick guilty verdicts. As a lawyer who represented Satanic killers deep in the Bible belt, Dan Stidham paid a high price for his work

No Remorse Divorce

There is a better way.

Divorce doesn’t have to be World War III. Millions of divorced couples have all started the same way: looking into the frightening void of what is to come and not knowing how it will end.

Ann Landers meets Oliver Sachs in this compelling collection of stories and advice from two divorce attorneys with more than four decades of sought-after experience helping people through one of life’s most wrenching experiences.

Here are twenty true-life tales that run the gamut of what any couple faces, all with advice that arrives like a firm hand on a shoulder—comforting, authoritative and above all, refreshing -- from two lawyers who are passionate about their mission to bring the power of mediated solutions to resolve conflict and avoid bitter fighting.

Laurie Levin and Emily Davis have been handling divorces for years and know a way to get through the chaos in one piece. They have seen it all--from multimillion dollar disputes to fights over a decorative mirror. They have counseled parents about how to shelter their children from the tsunami of the divorce.


Most divorce books offer advice as if the participants are heading into mortal combat. One has to look only at the titles of some of the best-selling books to see “survive” and “winning” and “overcoming” and “rebuilding” and “collateral damage” that make it sound as if the only thing certain in a divorce is warfare and destruction.

These terms spring from divorces that are based on the traditional litigation process in which attorneys foster long and projected fights.

Laurie Levin and Emily Davis have helped disputing parties work through their anguish and pain to reach equitable solutions.  They offer advice for anyone pondering divorce. Reading about other people's divorces will fortify a person in this anxiety-ridden situation. Each story presents a crisis and a resolution, reached through negotiated settlements.  

You are not alone.

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