Tuesday, June 16, 2015

An Alien Adventure.


In this David Dawson adventure, Dr. Robert Metzken, a world renowned physician, diagnoses Jack Miller, a young boy, with terminal cancer.  As a last effort to save Jack’s life, Jack’s parents, who have not lost hope, ask the hospital for permission for Dwight Adams, a reputed local Healer, to treat young Jack. For legal reasons, the hospital and Dr. Metzken deny the parent’s request. The boy dies. The boy’s parents sue the powerful hospital and the physician. Dawson is engaged by the Thomas Crawford law firm, counsel to the hospital, to investigate the reputation of Dwight Adams.
 In a series of taped interviews, Dawson learns that Adams talks to his dog, has cured his own son of cancer and visits regularly with an alien.  Adams tells Dawson that he is not a faith healer, but has discovered a secret healing technique.  Adams lives in a beautiful Arizona home, but has no visible means of financial support. He explains to Dawson that he has been taught investment techniques from an Alien, which allow him to finance his healing activities.
Backstory
Dawson is a single, G5 flying, 930 Porsche driving international traveler, and expert witness from Silicon Valley.  Meet him and his team as they dive into yet another adventure they didn’t expect—and a ride they couldn’t have anticipated. Dawson has two partners who work with him  at D&Z Partners:  Dr. Matthew Zimmerman, a Stanford graduate, resident genius and technology wizard; and  Helen Shepherd, a beautiful woman with more common sense and organizational skill than the other two partners combined.

Dawson has made millions in Silicon Valley, and as a result has an enormous catalog of international connections—both governmental and private. His expert witness investigations pull him into intrigue he doesn’t anticipate, and he uses his connections to pull him out. In a Quixotic way (minus the horse), he takes litigation cases that he believes will make a positive difference in the world. His special crusade is protecting American innovation.

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