Our Chicago Estate Planning Attorneys
About Eric G Matlin
In a career spanning more than 30 years as Founder of Matlin Law Group, P.C. (MLG), Eric helped thousands of families with their estate plans. He is now Of Counsel to the firm, consulting with partners, associates and staff as needed. He also serves as an ambassador of the MLG operation by educating the community about the importance of estate planning, helping ensure that its mission, to “Compassionately guide families through life’s transitions with professionalism and sensitivity,” continues for years and generations.
Eric’s core philosophy is that estate planning benefits everyone, and the amount they need is just a matter of scale. Whether you are rich or poor, 18 or 108, the picture of good health or seriously ill, estate planning provides harmony and peace of mind, a gift to loved ones. His urge to educate those who know they need estate planning but don’t understand its urgency led to his writing a book, The Procrastinator’s Guide to Wills and Estate Planning (2023 edition). It’s a fact that many of life’s most momentous events are not calendar items, so the time to plan is now.
Eric’s newest book, 2024’s Not Dead Yet, so plan your estate (NDY), reflects his belief that the need for an appropriate level of estate planning is universal, not just for the elderly, rich and sick. The 200-page text portion of NDY is presented in understandable bites with a minimum of legalese. The back 90 pages is a comic/graphic novel that caters to anyone who prefers learning visually by identifying with the graphic novel characters and learning from their dilemmas and solutions. Either way, text or graphic novel, print or Kindle, readers will come away with the practical knowledge they need to secure their family’s future.
Eric’s books are available from Amazon.com or free to clients of Matlin Law Group.
In addition to proselytizing about the need for estate planning, Eric volunteers for CJE Senior Life at Gidwitz Center, enjoys being “Papa” to his grandchildren, savors nature’s beauty by catching sunsets and moonrises over Lake Michigan, here and in southwest Michigan, and seeks a lifestyle that enables him to remain an “active senior,” reluctantly giving up pickleball based on it being the sport that fills the offices of orthopedic surgeons nationwide.