Publishing Lawyers for Boston, Massachusetts
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Leonid G.
I have been practicing law since 2018. I used to be a litigator at a nationwide practice before going in-house at a fintech company. I have experience drafting NDAs, SaaS contracts, service agreements, and stock purchase agreements.
"Leonid was amazing. He understood the company ethos, our mission, and how to best update our contracts to serve both. He communicated with me on his progress and stayed within the budget I relayed to him. Will hire again for the next project."
John M.
John Mercer is a distinguished corporate counsel who is well-known for turning legal challenges into strategic assets. He possesses a deep understanding and expertise in intellectual property (IP), compliance, and corporate law, particularly in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology sectors. His proficiency lies in transforming legal complexities into strategic advantages, ensuring operational excellence, and driving innovation forward. John excels at safeguarding an organization's legal interests and integrity, ensuring operations adhere to the law. As a strategic leader, John excels at safeguarding an organization’s legal interests and integrity, ensuring operations adhere to the law. He also brings immense value to his profession through his skills in drafting, negotiating, and managing significant agreements that secure organizational interests with widespread industry impact. His unparalleled expertise in legal advisories significantly enhances compliance and develops risk management frameworks that protect and advance company ambitions. Moreover, John's command over patent and trademark portfolios, alongside his ability to drive innovation initiatives and design incentive schemes, substantially bolsters intellectual property prowess. John's areas of expertise are extensive, covering skills vital to corporate law, legal contract negotiations, material transfer agreements, and more. He is particularly adept in regulatory compliance, legal consulting, clinical trials, biotechnology, patents, and patent portfolio analysis, to name a few. His leadership is complemented by active listening, analytical thinking, problem-solving abilities, and other soft skills that make him a leader and visionary.
"Thank you John, I appreciate your very personal effort with quality and practicality in mind."
Bruce H.
Experienced patent attorney supporting a variety of technologies.
Stephen R.
Steve Reich is licensed to practice in both New York and Massachusetts and is based in Boston. He assists with environmental litigation and other complex litigation and heads the firm's intellectual property practice, including copyright and trademark registration and protection. Other practice areas include commercial contract drafting and civil litigation.
"Fast, professional, and articulate—I would work with Stephen again."
December 12, 2023
Alexis L.
I am an attorney in Michigan. I attended Boston College for my undergraduate degree and Suffolk University Law School for my law degree. I have been practicing law for over 20 years.
December 13, 2023
James S.
Business and Real Property
January 2, 2024
Elaine T.
Trusted Intellectual Property Attorney, Advisor and Strategic Partner
June 3, 2024
Colin M.
Experienced attorney with a substantial history of crafting, evaluating, and bargaining multimillion-dollar commercial and government contracts across diverse sectors, encompassing the US Army, DoD contractors, employee benefits, NASDAQ, Pharmaceuticals, and Finance.
Mark L.
I worked in the Intellectual Property Group at Fidelity Investments for almost 25 years, including managing the group from 2017-2021. I managed and developed the same high-performing group of three legal professionals from 2007-2021. Early in my career at Fidelity, I focused primarily on trademark matters, including trademark searching and clearance, as well as enforcement of trademark rights. In fact, I created Fidelity's trademark and brand protection programs and advanced them over more than two decades, eventually bringing the domestic trademark portfolio in-house and realizing savings of well over $2 million in outside counsel expenses for searching, prosecution and maintenance of US registrations from 2008-2021. Fidelity put me through law school, and I continued working full time while attending law school at night over four years. Upon graduation and passing the bar in 2006, I was promoted to an attorney position effective 1/1/2007. My practice broadened, and I began working on more transactional matters. I became a key transactional attorney for major technology groups and businesses within Fidelity, and negotiated numerous mission critical tech deals, transforming Fidelity's business. I provided transactional and IP support for Fidelity's software development and services affiliate in Ireland, and worked extensively with many of Fidelity's other foreign affiliates. Fidelity's General Counsel handpicked me to provide transactional and IP support to a new business initiative in 2017. That initiative became fintech startup Akoya, LLC, a paradigm-shifting business that enables secure, customer-controlled sharing of personal financial information between financial institutions and service providers. I developed template agreements between Akoya and data providers (financial institutions) and also between Akoya and data recipients (e.g. tax preparation services and financial advisors). Akoya had matured enough to be spun out by Fidelity in early 2020 to a consortium of financial services companies. In 2021, Fidelity offered a voluntary buyout to long-tenured associates, and following the pandemic, coupled with the financial and health benefits included in the package, it was an offer I could not refuse. Days later, my elderly father-in-law broke his hip, and my wife and I became his primary caregivers. It's been a blessing that I was able to contribute to his care and alleviate some of the burden on my wife. He is now in a long-term care facility, and I am eager to return to work as in-house counsel, whether on a contract basis, part time or full time. I did work briefly as a sole practitioner in 2021 and 2022, primarily helping friends, family and pro bono clients with NDAs, business formation issues, consulting agreements and license agreements. From August 2022 - July 2023, I was on the staff of Flex by Fenwick, an in-house counsel on demand business that is a subsidiary of the IP firm Fenwick & West, but did not get any engagements. My wife and I have volunteered for over a year with a dog rescue, Last Hope K9 Rescue, and have fostered several dogs, and adopted two of them!
June 6, 2024
Michael P.
I have been licensed since 2006 and have extensive experience in family law, personal injury, criminal law, and general litigation. I have a solo practice and I am seeking new opportunities.
John L.
I have been practising law for over 30 years. I have extensive legal experience in contract disputes and drafting demand letters. I have been lead counsel in over 100 civil and criminal jury trials and have extensive litigation stradegy knowledge. I belive my experience would be of great benefit to any prospective client.
July 26, 2024
Matthew S.
I am a business, Internet, and intellectual property lawyer. My practice is split between both transactional work and litigation. Prior to law school, I earned a master’s degree in computer science, which gives me the background and experience to understand technology, software, and the Internet better than most attorneys, and so my practice focuses on these areas. However, I represent clients in almost any industry, including real estate, construction, medicine, service, and consumer products.
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Browse Lawyers NowPublishing Legal Questions and Answers
Publishing
Book Publishing Agreement
Connecticut
Can I terminate a book agreement if the publisher fails to fulfill their obligations?
I entered into a book agreement with a publisher to publish my manuscript, but they have repeatedly failed to fulfill their obligations, including missed deadlines, poor editing, and inadequate marketing efforts. As a result, I am concerned about the impact on the success of my book and my reputation as an author. I want to know if I have the right to terminate the agreement and seek a new publisher.
Randy M.
Based on what you’ve described and how Connecticut law generally works, it sounds like you probably have a solid basis for ending your publishing agreement. The important thing is understanding how contract law in Connecticut applies to your situation, and then following the right steps to protect your rights as you move forward. Let’s start with the big picture. Under Connecticut law, if a publisher commits a material breach, you have the right to terminate the contract. That means they’ve failed in such a significant way that the whole purpose of the agreement is essentially defeated. In publishing, this might look like missed deadlines over and over, poor editing that damages your reputation, or a total failure to do any of the marketing they promised. When you look at all the problems you’ve mentioned together, it’s likely enough to qualify as material breach. Now, it’s not about one minor slip-up. Courts look at everything in context. One late email won’t cut it, but if there’s a pattern of delays, low-quality work, and no real marketing effort, that adds up to something more serious. That’s when a court is more likely to say the breach is material. Next, you’ll want to take a close look at your contract. Most publishing agreements include a section about termination. Look for phrases like “material breach,” “cure period,” or “reversion of rights.” Many of these clauses will require you to give notice—typically 30 to 60 days—before you can walk away. Some agreements even say that if the publisher misses a key milestone, like a publication deadline, and doesn’t fix it within a set window, you can end things automatically. Also, check what the contract says about advance payments. In most cases, if they breach first, you keep the advance and get your rights back. Just be sure to see if there’s a clause about legal fees, because some contracts say you could owe their attorney’s costs if they challenge your termination and win. The type of publisher matters, too. If you signed with a traditional publisher that paid you an advance and took on the financial risk, courts usually hold them to a higher standard. But if it’s a hybrid or vanity publisher and you paid upfront, it’s more like a service contract. That can change how a judge sees each party’s obligations and how they interpret what “performance” really means in your case. Before you do anything official, put together a timeline that shows missed deadlines, poor communication, weak deliverables, and anything else that supports your case. Save all emails, notes, and written promises. If the editing was sloppy, point to specific examples that show real, objective problems, not just stylistic preferences. Same with marketing. What were you promised, and what did you actually get? All of this documentation will help in two ways. First, it strengthens your legal position. Second, it gives you clear, credible language for your notice letter. Speaking of notice, Connecticut law typically expects you to give the other party a chance to fix things before ending the contract. That means sending a formal letter that spells out what they’ve done wrong, points to the relevant sections of your agreement, and gives them a chance to cure the problems, either within the timeframe listed in the contract or, if there isn’t one, within a “reasonable” period. Be specific. Don’t just say “the editing was bad.” Say something like, “Failure to provide professional editing services under Section X, resulting in multiple grammatical errors and inconsistencies that reduce the manuscript’s professional quality.” Clarity here matters, especially if the situation ends up in dispute. If they don’t fix the issues in time, then you’re in a position to send a formal termination notice. If that happens, your rights usually revert back to you, and you’re free to publish elsewhere. You typically won’t owe back the advance either, assuming the breach was on their side. Just keep an eye out for any non-compete clauses or restrictions that could delay your ability to republish the same work right away. Of course, sometimes you can resolve things without pulling the plug completely. If you think there’s still a chance to salvage the relationship—or if the publisher seems willing to talk—it might be worth having a direct conversation. You could end up with a mutual termination or at least avoid legal headaches. That said, you don’t have to keep tolerating poor performance just to avoid conflict. If they’re harming your book or your reputation, it’s absolutely reasonable to consider legal options. Finally, while you can handle much of this yourself, getting a lawyer involved might be a smart move, especially if the contract has any fee-shifting provisions or vague language. An attorney can help you assess how strong your case is, draft the notice properly, and make sure you don’t accidentally create liability while trying to assert your rights. They can also tell you if you might be entitled to any damages beyond simply walking away, such as lost sales or reputational harm.
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Publishing lawyers by top cities
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Publishing lawyers by nearby cities
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