Larry Sarezky is an accomplished divorce lawyer who uses his award-winning creative skills, courtroom savvy, and uniquely comforting voice to maximize results and minimize the pain for separating partners and their children. Called “the kind of divorce lawyer anyone would want” (Foreword Clarion Reviews), Larry has represented Fortune 500 CEOs; Major League Baseball Hall of Famers; and Oscar, Grammy, and Emmy Award winners.
During his 35-year career, Larry developed an approach to divorce designed to maximize results while minimizing financial and emotional costs. That approach is now available to the public in his best-selling book, “Divorce, Simply Stated” (second edition), which Book Authority has named the #1 All-Time Best Family Law BoLarry Sarezky is an accomplished divorce lawyer who uses his award-winning creative skills, courtroom savvy, and uniquely comforting voice to maximize results and minimize the pain for separating partners and their children. Called “the kind of divorce lawyer anyone would want” (Foreword Clarion Reviews), Larry has represented Fortune 500 CEOs; Major League Baseball Hall of Famers; and Oscar, Grammy, and Emmy Award winners.
During his 35-year career, Larry developed an approach to divorce designed to maximize results while minimizing financial and emotional costs. That approach is now available to the public in his best-selling book, “Divorce, Simply Stated” (second edition), which Book Authority has named the #1 All-Time Best Family Law Book.
Larry also wrote and directed the Telly Award-winning short film “Talk to Strangers,” as well as its companion guide, to prevent harm to children caused by unnecessary child-related litigation. The nationally acclaimed film that has brought audiences of family judges and divorce lawyers to tears is used by is used by judges, lawyers, and therapists throughout the United States and abroad.
Larry has lectured across the country to judges, mediators, lawyers, and mental health professionals, and his family law commentaries have appeared in publications ranging from the “Huffington Post” to “The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child” co-founded by Anna Freud. ...more
My biggest fear as a divorce lawyer is that thousands of children are growing up wondering why the “grown-ups” didn’t protect them from their parents’ high conflict divorces. So I put together a list of ten questions to ask clients who were considering custody battles. If it’s your co-parent who wants to fight over the kids, see if he or she can answer the following: