The wild world of mass torts can be irresistibly enticing to plaintiffs attorneys from small firms. With the promises of huge fees and the suggestion of a nominal amount of work on each case, mass torts seem too good to be true.

However, John Grisham’s novel, “The Litigators,” tells the cautionary tale of plaintiffs attorneys who unwittingly follow the siren’s song of mass torts only to shipwreck on the rocky island of sanctions, malpractice suits and financial ruin. In “The Litigators,” the “boutique firm” of Finley & Figg deviates from its meat-and-potatoes personal injury practice to pursue a bad drug claim against one of Big Pharma’s most powerful companies. The story winds through creation of multidistrict litigation, deceptive negotiations by the pharmaceutical company and shifting allegiances of the mass tort firms that purport to be on the plaintiffs side.