From a six-year-old boy who scooted over in his Catholic school desk to make room for his guardian angel to a seasoned trial lawyer facing catastrophic financial collapse, Making Room is a memoir about vocation, moral responsibility, and the quiet spiritual disciplines that sustain a life under pressure.
Attorney Michael Hackard traces his journey through formative childhood experiences shaped by Irish Catholic faith, generational hardship, and early encounters with death and fear, including the Cuban Missile Crisis and the unsettling proximity of the Charles Manson case early in his legal career. As his professional life unfolds, Hackard becomes a national pharmaceutical mass tort litigator, representing clients suffering from life-threatening drug injuries across the country.
But success gives way to profound trials. Brain surgery. Pharmaceutical poisoning. The 2008 financial collapse. The sudden death of a business partner. Twelve years of high-stakes litigation threatening personal and professional ruin. Through it all, Hackard wrestles not only with legal battles but with the moral complexity of contingency-fee practice, promises made to dying clients, and the limits of human control.
Interwoven throughout are deeply personal moments: driving grandchildren to school each morning, reliving lessons from his father and grandmother, reflecting on the dignity of a woman who once worked in his family's home. These anchors of love and continuity form a counterpoint to courtroom conflict and financial uncertainty.
Rooted in Catholic spirituality and Ignatian formation, Making Room is not a triumphalist story of victory but a meditation on endurance. It asks what it means to serve faithfully when outcomes are uncertain, to act with integrity in systems larger than oneself, and to "make room" for help beyond what can be seen.
For readers interested in faith in professional life, legal ethics, resilience, and memoirs of lived conviction, Making Room offers a candid and deeply reflective account of perseverance through breaking-and rebuilding.