The Cell Game : Sam Waksal's Fast Money and False Promises--and the Fate of ImClone's Cancer Drug

Author: Alex Prud'homme
List Price: $24.95
Our Price: Click to see the latest and low price
ISBN: 0060555564
Publisher: HarperBusiness (20 January, 2004)
Sales Rank: 32,005
Average Customer Rating: 4.75 out of 5

Customer Reviews

Rating: 5 out of 5
Reads like a novel, but it's a true story
I could hardly put this book down. Never mind the Martha Stewart trial, this is where the excitement and drama in the ImClone story lies.

Sam Waksal, a scientist and business developer with a checkered past, lives a celebrity lifestyle, hanging out with the rich and famous, owning several fancy houses, driving fast cars, and heading a firm that is working on a cancer drug so promising that people with no other hope of treatment are flinging themselves at ImClone, begging for a merciful dose of "Erbitux."

The drug apparently does reverse inoperable tumors in a few test patients who had no other hope of living. Now the race is on to fast-track the drug through the FDA approval process based on the glowing clinical trials. But the FDA reviewer is unaccountably unencouraging when meeting with one of ImClone's top scientists. What is wrong? Is Erbitux, instead of being approved , instead going have its application refused? Why! And what will this mean for the high-flying ImClone stock?

The book reads like the best thriller, and author Alex Prud'homme is adept at making you feel like the proverbial fly-on-the-wall during the action. If you are at all interested in what happened behind the Martha Stewart debacle, you must read this. It's fantastic.


Rating: 5 out of 5
Lively character study about a needless tragedy
This book is a fine character study of an amazingly talented man whose endless need to gratify his own appetites and emotional needs led him to careless, and even cruel behavior. There is no denying all that Sam Waksal was capable of, but to this day he doesn't seem to understand that his talent and accomplishments weren't enough. He also hurt a lot of people.

It is amazingly sad that all of this misery was so pointless because Erbitux has at last been approved. It almost certainly could have been approved earlier if the talented team at ImClone would have had a culture of discipline and getting things done and documented in ways that everyone knew the FDA required. If they had all this pain and loss would never have occurred and Dr. Waksal would be a real hero instead of the one he only pretended to be.

Mr. Prud'homme writes with style and vitality. The book moves along well and has a great feel for keeping the story personal and emotionally accessible for the reader. We don't get overwhelmed with the scientific side of things, although it is always interesting to read about this emerging science and the wizards who are making it happen.


Rating: 5 out of 5
A GRIPPING YARN!!!!
This book is beautifully written and the story is powerfully, artfully told. Alex Prud'homme's eye for telling details and anecdotes brings to life all of the egos, greed, outsized appetites, and fat wallets that intersected in Sam Waksal and Martha Stewart's world. I couldn't put it down.

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