The prematurely launched book on the missing Mh370 titled Flight MH370: The Mystery was slammed by Today's Host Karl Stefanovic as disgusting and by Paul Weeks's wife as heartless. Weeks was a passenger in the plane.

The book, authored by Nigel Cawthorne, came just 11 weeks after the tragedy. It stands by the theory that the missing plane was shot down in US-Thai war games. The war games allegedly involved mock warfare on land, in water and in the air, and would include live-fire exercises. And to cover for this neglect, the search team was intentionally pointed to the wrong search area.

Through a live interview, Stefanovic lambasted Cawthorne for being insensitive to the feelings of the grieving families given that he wrote the book even if he has no idea as to what had happened to the plane.

Stefanovic read a line from the book which went, saying that the passengers have died "in terror in a flaming wreck crashing from the sky in the hands of a madman."

"You dedicate this book, at the start of the book, to the families. So you can understand why they might take issue with it when you don't know what happened," Stefanovic said.

Cawthorne defended his work by saying that it was merely presenting a possibility. But it became worse when Cawthorne said that what he came up with was colourful even if "none of the theories actually fit all the facts."

Danica Weeks, wife of passenger Paul Weeks, described the book as heartless. She last saw her husband when he was leaving their Perth home to attend to a job in Mongolia. She also said that two films on MH370 is too upsetting.

Mrs Weeks told stuff.co.nz that she was just pushing the book and the two films outside of her thoughts to attend to more important things as the spokesperson for Voice 370.

"It makes me so angry that they could do something so heartless . . . when we know nothing. It is way too early. I wish they would put their energy into helping us find the truth. If they know what happened, that would be great. We would love to know."