Robert Henry Rotstein is an American attorney and novelist currently based in Los Angeles, California. He has published four novels so far, including Corrupt Practices, Reckless Disregard,The Bomb Maker's Son and We, The Jury. He is also currently a partner at the law firm of Mitchell Silberberg & Knupp LLP, focusing on entertainment law, intellectual property law and commercial litigation.
Rotstein has published a series of three novels all revolving around the trial attorney protagonist of Parker Stern. In October 2018 his first stand-alone novel, We, the Jury, was released. The first novel in the series, Corrupt Practices, introduces Parker Stern as an attorney hired by an affluent former client named Rich Baxter to defend him in a lawsuit filed by a powerful Los Angeles church alleging that Baxter has embezzled millions from them. Stern reluctantly takes the case because he has not set foot in a courtroom since his mentor, Harmon Cherry, committed suicide. Yet he gets drawn into the case once realizing that Cherry did not kill himself but was murdered by someone connected to the church. The book received a starred review from Booklist and other positive reviews from New York Journal of Books and Publishers Weekly. The next novel in the series, Reckless Disregard, follows Stern taking on a case for an elusive video game designer simply known as "Poniard." In Poniard's popular online game "Abduction," a movie mogul is charged with murdering and kidnapping a beautiful movie actress who disappeared in the 1980s; the mogul proceeds to sue Poniard for libel. However, when potential witnesses start dying, and survivors become too frightened to talk, Stern begins to feel like trapped in a game - or something larger - himself. The novel received a starred review from Kirkus Reviews. The most recent installment in the Parker Stern series is The Bomb Maker's Son involves Stern representing, at the urging of his mother, a man named Ian Holzner - otherwise known as "The Playa Delta Bomber" that planted a bomb in 1975 that allegedly killed four people. When another "Holzner bomb" explodes and other violent terrorist acts begin to escalate with increasing frequency, Stern slowly begins to undercover the truth behind Holzner and realities involving his family and his own past. The book received positive reviews from Lee Child, Booklist, Kirkus Reviews and Publishers Weekly. Rotstein is also a member of the Mystery Writers of America and the International Thriller Writers.