top of page

Dr. Max Bradford, an infectious disease specialist, is a different breed of doctor. Black Lethal details Max’s struggle against enforced servitude and the ways he attempts, against all odds, to triumph.

ABOUT THE BOOK

In Black Lethal, Max, a wounded white child raised in the harsh environment of an orphanage in the Philippines, is adopted by a Filipino governor and eventually attends medical school. His experiences drive him to rescue abused and helpless kids across the globe and become a CNN medical reporter.
Max captures damning footage of broken young boys enslaved in tin mines in the Congo. When his story is killed, Max returns to the Philippines, builds an orphanage, and focuses on research. He discovers near-miraculous treatments for severe infections—many, ironically, relying on tin.
One of Max’s serums becomes the only known cure for a fatal virus that spreads across the globe and threatens to wipe out the entire human population. The discovery puts Max and his family in extreme peril. The U.S. government and a powerful Chinese triad vie for control of the serum, and Max’s sons are kidnapped by ruthless mercenaries to coerce him into producing the serum on their demand.
Black Lethal details Max’s struggle against enforced servitude and the ways he attempts, against all odds, to triumph.

WHAT PEOPLE SAY

Notebook and Pencil

Joan Schweighardt
author

Times are bad; people are in the streets, either protesting or begging. Worse, the virus causing the strange black wounds that doctors have begun to see on their patients’ hands and arms is no longer responding to antibiotics. If it continues to mutate, a worldwide deadly pandemic will result. Finding a solution is a goal shared by both Dr. Bradford and Dr. Han. But their motives are poles apart, and so are their methods.


Black Lethal is an exotic, exhilarating and original thriller—and because the author, a doctor himself, knows of what he speaks, it is frightening as hell.

 

Julie Mars
author

Set in the post-apocalyptic near-future in locations across the globe, Black Lethal places Dr. Max Bradford in the fight of his life against a fast-spreading and always-fatal virus. Death rates soar, governments vie for control of his possible cure, and violence, betrayal, and despair abound as Bradford struggles to complete a mission that even he believes is doomed. Along the way, author Jay Roberts orchestrates a literary coup—a dystopian novel ironically powered by hope. It requires a great imagination, intricate plotting, and extremely precise writing to connect such random dots and produce a page-turner—but Roberts delivers!

 

RobertsJ_3DBook_BIG.png
bottom of page