
After a car crash, the hardest part is not always the injury. It is the not knowing. Is the adjuster really on your side? Should you give that recorded statement? Why did the emergency room say you were fine when you can barely move the next morning? What is your case actually worth, and what quietly makes it worth less? Those are the questions I answer every week, and they should not cost a consultation to hear.
So I put the answers in a book. Hurt in a Florida Car Crash is a plain-English guide to what really happens after a wreck in this state: the two clocks that start the day it happens, the coverage you may not know you are carrying, why your medical record becomes your case, the insurance company’s playbook named move by move, and how to tell when you actually need a lawyer. Twenty-one chapters, fifteen diagrams, and a reference section you can hand to anyone. It covers the ordinary fender-bender and the crashes that change a life: hit by a drunk driver, hit by someone with no insurance, and the wreck that turns fatal.
I wrote it for the person sitting at the kitchen table the week after a crash, not for other lawyers. No scare tactics, no promises of a payday. Just an honest map of a system that is not built to explain itself to you, and a clear picture of where good people quietly lose money they were owed.
It is coming to Amazon in paperback and Kindle. And if you or someone you love was hurt in a Tampa Bay crash, I will mail you a copy free, no strings.
Because the mistakes that cost people the most happen in the first days, and you are better Safir than sorry.

