Mnookin is the author of three non-fiction books.
Hard News His first book,
Hard News: The Scandals at the New York Times and Their Meaning for American Media (Random House, 2004) grew out of reporting he did as a senior writer at
Newsweek in 2002 and 2003. It uses the
Jayson Blair plagiarism and fabrication scandal to conduct a broader examination of the troubles during the
Howell Raines administration at the
New York Times. It was named a
Washington Post "Best Of" book for 2004 and was listed as one of the London
Independents list of the Top 50 books ever written on the media. It received overwhelmingly positive reviews from
New York magazine ("richly dramatic, hugely entertaining"),
Entertainment Weekly ("vigorous, purposeful prose and a killer knack for building suspense"), the
Los Angeles Times ("two terrific books in one: a riveting thriller...and a Shakespearean tragedy"), and the
Washington Post ("hard to put down...reads like a thriller"), among other places, and the book prompted
Hunter S. Thompson to say Mnookin was "one of the best and brightest journalists of this ominous, post-American century." A negative review was published by the
New York Times itself, which called the book "tedious" and said it "elevates trivial details to novelistic significance."
Feeding the Monster In the fall of 2004,
Vanity Fair assigned Mnookin a story on the
Boston Red Sox. He began covering the team right before they won the
2004 World Series, and ended up spending more than a year living with the team and was given a key to
Fenway Park His book, "Feeding the Monster: How Money, Smarts and Nerve Took a Team to the Top" (Simon & Schuster), chronicled the history of the team from 2001 to 2006, the first half-decade of the
John W. Henry-
Tom Werner ownership, and includes details about
Theo Epstein's abbreviated departure from the team in late 2005. It was published in the summer of 2006, and it entered the
New York Times Hardcover Bestseller List for Nonfiction at number 8. After Epstein left the Red Sox for the
Chicago Cubs, he made an apparent reference to the book when he talked about the difficulty of dealing with "the monster" of fan and ownership expectations for a championship team every year.
The Panic Virus In 2011,
Simon & Schuster published Mnookin's
The Panic Virus: The True Story of the Vaccine-Autism Controversy. The book examines the history of the controversy over vaccines and autism, going back to a retracted 1998 study by
Andrew Wakefield through to the current day. It is heavily critical of several public figures, including
Jenny McCarthy,
Oprah Winfrey, and
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. In
The Panic Virus, Mnookin tells the story of several parents who, after choosing to either skip or delay their children's vaccine schedule, saw their children contract easily avoidable diseases such as
Haemophilus influenzae and
Pertussis. He relays the accounts of parents who objected to or delay their children's vaccine schedules for various reasons such as ambivalence, religious objections, or even misguided information from external sources. He also highlights the
Cedillo v. Secretary of Health and Human Services, beginning on June 11, 2007, in which the Cedillo family's lawsuit made the claim that
Thiomersal, a compound found in
Hepatitis B,
DPT, and
Hib vaccines, weakened their daughter's immune system such that the live measles virus found within the
MMR vaccine overwhelmed her system and thereby caused
Autism. After a lengthy process, the courts ruled against the Cedillo family, citing questionable witnesses and a large quantity of circumstantial evidence. Mnookin additionally focuses on the now-discredited Andrew Wakefield and his work as a main player in the vaccines-cause-autism argument. Wakefield is repeatedly mentioned, as is celebrity advocate against vaccination
Jenny McCarthy, often in the context of anecdotes by parents outraged by the often one-sided exposure given to these figures in the media.
The Panic Virus was named one of the
Wall Street Journals Top Five Health and Medicine books of the year. The
New York Times called it a "tour de force" and wrote that "[p]arents who want to play it safe, but are not altogether sure how, should turn with relief to this reasoned, logical and comprehensive analysis of the facts." Writing for the
Wall Street Journal,
Michael Shermer said it "should be required reading at every medical school in the world. ... a lesson on how fear hijacks reason and emotion trumps logic. — A brilliant piece of reportage and science writing."
The Panic Virus was a finalist for the
Los Angeles Times book prize in the "Current Interest" category. It won the New England Chapter of the American Medical Writers Association's Will Solimene Award for Excellence and the National Association of Science Writers 2012 "Science in Society" Award ==Other work==