Author: amy-rogers

  • SPOTLIGHT on GLOBAL THRILLERS High-Stakes Thriller, Chillers, multiple Killers – CIBA Thriller Books, Book Awards, Best Thriller Books

    SPOTLIGHT on GLOBAL THRILLERS High-Stakes Thriller, Chillers, multiple Killers – CIBA Thriller Books, Book Awards, Best Thriller Books

    It’s come down to this…

    You’re good at deadlines… cutting the right wire under pressure is nothing. You can take down dozens of bad guys with just your wit and some duct tape.

    You can certainly make this deadline!

     

     

    Our new deadline for the 2020 (only) in the  CIBA GLOBAL THRILLER  Awards is October 31, 2020, at 11:59 p.m.

    (*Beware, my friends, for the Global Thriller Awards deadline next year will be one month earlier ~ September 30, 2021! …tick, tick, tick!)

    ENTER TODAY!

    Avanti Centrae pulled the trigger just in time and brought home the CIBA 2019 GRAND PRIZE in GLOBAL THRILLERS Book Awards for SOLSTICE SHADOWS – A VanOps Thriller!

     

     

    The First in Category Winners for The 2019 Global Thrillers are: 

     

    • Randall Krzak for Carnage in Singapore
    • Courtney Leigh Pahlke for Life Force Preserve
    • Jett Ward for Execute Order
    • Nicole Mabry for Past This Point
    • Avanti Centrae for VanOps: The Solstice Shadows
    • Joanne Jaytanie for Salvaging Truth, Hunters & Seekers, Book 1

     

     

     

     


    In 2018, Michael Pronko won the Global Thriller Awards with The Moving Blade.

     

     

    The 2018 Global Thrillers First in Category Winners are:

     

    • Magenta is Missing by Richard Garis
    • Dangerous Alliance by Randall Krzak
    • The War Beneath by Timothy S. Johnston
    • The Sunken Forest by R. Barber Anderson
    • Never Again by Harvey A. Schwartz   
    • Beyond Control by  Lawrence Verigin

     

     

     


    Sara Stamey took home the Grand Prize in 2017 for The Ariadne Connection

     

    The First in Category Winners for 2017: 

     

     

     


    Here are some winners that came before: 

    From the 2016 CLUE Awards:

     


    From the 2015 CLUE Awards:

    • Blended Genre: Timothy S. Johnston – The Tanner Sequence: The FurnaceThe Freezer, The Void
    • Espionage/Spy: Michele Daniel  The Red Circle

    We also had Cybertech Thrillers and Political Thrillers such as John Trudel’s Raven’s Resurrection and the Raven’s Series.


    Here’s your assignment, if you choose to accept it…

     

    Submit your Thrillers in the following categories by October 31, 2020,  for a chance to bring home a First in Category WIN the 2020 CIBAs in Global Thrillers – or a Grand Prize – or maybe even the Overall Grand Prize! 

                • Historic
                • LabLit
                • Science Fiction
                • Dramatic
                • Action/Adventure
                • CyberTech

    If you never enter, you’ll never know!  

    Follow this link and enter today! 

    Tick Tock…


    (For light-hearted, cozy, or classic Mystery and Suspense entries see our Mystery & Mayhem Awards and for Thriller/Suspense/Hardboiled-Detective series, please see the CLUE Awards)

    Don’t delay! Enter today!

  • GLOBAL Chillers, Killers, High-Stakes Thrillers  – We want them all! Welcome to the November SPOTLIGHT on Global Thrillers Awards

    GLOBAL Chillers, Killers, High-Stakes Thrillers – We want them all! Welcome to the November SPOTLIGHT on Global Thrillers Awards

    The clock is ticking… you’re working on a deadline while your husband is across town, picking up the kids. You’ve taken the day off and gone to the cabin. You have to write that last chapter … the one that will get your work noticed, like J.D. Barker or Stephen King kind of noticed.

    Then the inexplicable happens, as you type in the very last line and hit return, your screen goes black. You reach to plug in your computer, but it’s already plugged in… You jiggle the cords. You hit ESC. You hit RETURN. You unplug the thing and plug it back in again. Nothing. You do a hard reset…

    This time the screen powers on and a thin line travels across the middle of it. Then words appear…

    “You have until November 30, 2019, 11.59 p.m. to turn in your Global Thriller, or you will have no chance of winning…” 

    Don’t let this happen to you! Turn in your High-Stakes Thriller, your Chillers, your multiple Killers for a chance at the prize! But one thing is certain, if you don’t enter, you won’t have a chance of winning!

     

    Be like Michael Pronko who submitted his novel, The Moving Blade, all the way from Japan –

    and took home the 2018 CIBA Grand Prize in the Global Thriller Awards!

     


    Or, you can be like these 2018 Global Thriller Book Awards for Lab Lit & High Stakes Thriller Novels First in Category Winners!

    • Magenta is Missing by Richard Garis
    • Dangerous Alliance by Randall Krzak
    • The War Beneath by Timothy S. Johnston
    • The Sunken Forest by R. Barber Anderson
    • Never Again by Harvey A. Schwartz   
    • Beyond Control by  Lawrence Verigin

    Sara Stamey took home the Grand Prize in 2017 for The Ariadne Connection

    The First in Category Winners for 2017: 


    Here are some winners that came before: 

    From the 2016 CLUE Awards:

     


    From the 2015 CLUE Awards:

    • Blended Genre: Timothy S. Johnston – The Tanner Sequence: The FurnaceThe Freezer, The Void
    • Espionage/Spy: Michele Daniel  The Red Circle

    We also had Cybertech Thrillers and Political Thrillers such as John Trudel’s Raven’s Resurrection and the Raven’s Series.


    Here’s your assignment, if you choose to accept it…

     

    Submit your Thrillers in the following categories by November 30, 2019, for a chance to bring home a First in Category WIN the 2019 CIBAs in Global Thrillers – or a Grand Prize – or maybe even the Overall Grand Prize! 

    • Historic
    • LabLit
    • Science Fiction
    • Dramatic
    • Action/Adventure
    • CyberTech

    If you never enter, you’ll never know!  

    Follow this link and enter today! 

    Tick Tock…


    (For light-hearted, cozy, or classic Mystery and Suspense entries see our Mystery & Mayhem Awards and for Thriller/Suspense/Hardboiled-Detective series, please see the CLUE Awards)

    Don’t delay! Enter today!

     

     

  • An Editorial Review of “Petroplague” by Amy Rogers

    An Editorial Review of “Petroplague” by Amy Rogers

    If you’re a fan of techno-thrillers, you’ll want to read Petroplague by Amy Rogers just for the breath of fresh air it brings to the genre, especially by its characters—all realistic scientists behaving like real scientists would–and a fresh plot that avoids some of the tired clichés—lots of murder, mayhem, and a protagonist who performs a series of almost superhuman feats, one after another, and emerges unscathed. If you don’t usually read techno-thrillers, this one’s definitely worth picking up for the same reasons—it’s different.

    Christina Gonzales, the protagonist, is attractive and has a pleasant personality. However, she doesn’t wear make- up, and she dresses with comfort in mind. She’s investigating a strain of petroleum-eating bacteria, like those used to assist clean-up efforts after the Exxon Valdez disaster, for her PhD thesis at UCLA. Her bacteria, Syntrophus, are different in that they are anaerobic, and they work in concert with other bacteria deep in crude oil deposits to produce methane, the principle ingredient in natural gas. She is also helping her thesis adviser, develop a strain of E. coli that will produce isobutanol, a good but expensive substitute for gasoline.

    Christina shares an apartment with her cousin River and River’s boyfriend, Mickey, which is near the UCLA campus. The real action begins when we learn that an eco-terrorist bomb, which exploded in an underground storage tank of an abandoned gas station in South LA, destroyed Christina’s pilot project and thesis. The tanks, loaded with instrumentation, were filled with low-grade crude oil infected with Christina’s oil-eating bacteria. It quickly becomes clear that Christina’s bacteria were also released by the explosion and have evolved into aerobic organisms that are gobbling up gasoline, diesel fuel, and jet fuel. Also, out of their underground anaerobic environment, the bacteria are producing, not methane but acetic acid and hydrogen, an odorless, invisible and extremely explosive gas. This is the beginning of the LA petroplague.

    Cars, trucks and planes grind to a halt as Christina’s bacteria consume their fuel, while free hydrogen gas causes explosions and fires around the city. In an artful twist, Christina realizes that she has inadvertently passed information to the eco-terrorist. As the cast of characters continues to grow, Rogers weaves them into an intricate plot as the science becomes intriguingly more complex.

    Amy Rogers, a Harvard educated, M.D., and Ph.D.,  writes thrilling science-themed novels that pose “frightening what if? questions.” She grounds her thrillers in fact until the last possible second. Then she blurs the lines between fact and fiction. This is where Rogers well-crafted explanations maneuver her readers to become wrapped up in the story-line and with its compelling characters.

    In the interest of scientific literacy, Rogers added five-pages of technical notes at the end in which she explains the scientific details (with references, bless her heart) and distinguishes between and the  parts where, she admits, “I made this stuff up.” I can recommend Petroplague without hesitation to readers fascinated by real science as well as to my most science-phobic friends. The revelations in her writing will make readers feel like they are insiders in a field that only an elite few understand.