Hello all you blog readers out there! I’m writing today to let you know that I’ve
written a new book that was just published – The Drug Makers. To my surprise, my last book, Antibiotics - The Perfect Storm, sold over 12,000 copies and sales are still coming in even though Springer keeps raising the price!
The blurb from
the back cover of The Drug Makers is copied here –
Daniel
Simon leaves his job as a professor at a Midwestern medical school to work in the
pharmaceutical industry because he wants to make a greater and more direct impact in
his field. But he soon finds that in his new role, he must contend with petty
crooks, fraudsters, and brilliant but money-hungry researchers. There’s also
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which seeks to put a regulatory death to
what could be lifesaving antibiotics. Whether he’s working at a large company,
small company or biotechnology company, he sees how they make decisions,
conduct research, and earn revenue. Sometimes, he gets caught in turf battles
and must deal with inflated egos. With a career and family to think about,
Daniel works hard to bring new antibiotics to the
market, but he becomes increasingly frustrated by the hurdles that must be overcome.
He has his work cut out for him in The Drug Makers.
“The world
is full of myth and lore about…pharmaceutical companies. David Shlaes has
laid that world bare…an insider’s view, a brutally honest exposé…a story of
triumph over adversity.”
—Brad
Spellberg, chief medical officer, LAC-USC Medical Center.
The book is available via the publisher, Lulu,
Amazon
and Barnes
and Noble. Unlike my previous book, the digital version of The Drug Makers
is $8-9! Also, unlike my previous book,
this one is a work of fiction. You
should consider it to have been well researched. You will get an accurate
idea of what its like to work in the industry. How do scientists deal with work
where 95% of everything they do results in failure? (Hint – focus on the
science). How do projects move forward in industry? (With the most unbelievable
difficulty). Who makes decisions?
(Frequently they are made by people who have or believe they have some personal
stake in the outcome of the decisions).
What is the basis of these decisions? (They are based on highly fallible
data – usually from marketing – or they are even based on inaccurate science).
How does an individual move projects forward in such a system? (Its not easy
and it usually takes a village or even a city). In spite of all this,
miraculously, there are successes and important drugs (antibiotics) do occasionally make it
all the way to the market.
The book exposes the inner workings of large companies,
mid-size companies, biotechs, start-ups, and even academics trying to carry out
antibiotic discovery and development. In the midst of it all, you see how a
fictional protagonist keeps swimming upstream. If you enjoy this blog, you will
like the book.
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