Tag: Medical Thriller

  • THE VINES by Shelley Nolden – Medical Mystery, Suspense, Historical Fiction

     

    Clue Grand Prize Badge for The Vines by Shelley Nolden

    Shelley Nolden’s debut novel, The Vines, embraces multiple genres as it chills, fascinates, and horrifies, from historical and magical realism to fantasy and horror.

    Nolden has melded fanaticism, medical anomalies, and the frailties of human behavior together with a historic setting, creating a narrative Kudzu vine that grows rapidly and spares nothing in its path. This particular vine consists of two main branches that intertwine, bridging time and linking parallel realities, one past, one present.

    The Gettler men of Long Island, New York have shepherded a secret medical research project for generations, with the exception of Finn, the youngest man in the family.

    Beginning with Otto, Finn’s great-grandfather, who worked at the Riverside Hospital on North Brother Island at the turn of the 20th century, this family has been consumed by unanswered medical questions about universal conditions that impact the human race.

    Years after Otto’s death, the Riverside Hospital was ultimately closed, leaving North Brother abandoned, subject to the ravages of rats, birds, and vines. However, Finn’s father and grandfather secretly continued Otto’s research at the now crumbling, empty medical facility.

    Although aware of their secret research, Finn had always been excluded from the details, despite his curiosity. What exactly were they doing? And why?

    In 2007, the 28-year-old Finn clandestinely crosses the East River to North Brother. Instead of learning about his family’s secret research, he encounters an unfriendly, mysterious woman, her body scarred from previous physical abuse, yet fit and strong, bathing in one of the abandoned buildings.

    More than a century ago in February 1903, Coraline McSorley, Cora to most, is infected with typhus and quarantined at Riverside Hospital, New York City’s most notorious pesthouse.

    The ensuing story skips back and forth in time, slowly revealing itself through flashbacks, real-time, and places in between. As it grows, The Vines becomes more engaging. Nolden utilizes historical people, places, and events associated with North Brother Island to create a story in which Cora, along with the island itself, are sympathetic characters irrevocably tied to a family whose fanatical, convoluted curiosities dominate every aspect of their lives.

    Several chapters into the book, the hook is set deep, pulling the reader in close and holding them there.

    The Vines offers readers a mystery to be unraveled, connecting dots back and forth in time as the pace and action increase. Rather than ending with a conclusive resolution, The Vines leaves questions for the reader to ponder, matching the curiosity of the story’s characters.

    Readers pulled into this mystery will be glad to find another baited hook dangling just beyond the gateway to the future, as Nolden suggests a sequel is in the works.

    The Vines by Shelley Nolden won Grand Prize in the 2021 CIBA CLUE Awards for Suspense and Thriller Mysteries.

     

    5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

  • PLAGUE by C.C. Humphreys – Historical Thriller, Medical Thriller, Serial Killers

    PLAGUE by C.C. Humphreys – Historical Thriller, Medical Thriller, Serial Killers

     

     

    Captain William Coke lives as a thief with a conscience, in C.C. Humphrey’s historical thriller, Plague. Never loading his pistol with anything more than powder, he carefully selects his victims from the wealthy and the pompous. But he soon walks into crimes far more horrific than robbery.

    Captain Coke and Dickon, a rescued street urchin, never expected to find their marks slaughtered on the road to London. Coke has never seen a killing like this, not even on the battlefield fighting to restore his king to the throne in the English Civil War. Pitman, a thief-taker, is likewise shocked by the brutality of the murders supposedly committed by the highwayman he has come to see as a gentleman bandit. Now, Pitman will stop at nothing to find Coke, who has become known as the Monstrous Coke after the notorious murder.

    As the murders continue, the victims piling up, Pitman and Coke begin to realize that this criminal doesn’t just kill, but kills with religious symbolism. The two eventually team up to find the murderer. When the killer brutalizes and murders an actor, his wife and fellow actress, Sarah, becomes an ally of the men who are chasing him.

    The would-be detectives face yet another obstacle when the Black Plague breaks out across the poverty-stricken parts of London. These unlikely heroes must now dodge not only the law, but a serial killer, a deadly illness, and a heretical cult who search for that which will take them from the gutters to the palace.

    Coke, Sarah, and Pitman contrast one another, each with a well-developed character. Captain Coke first meets Sarah when he is fulfilling a pledge to visit and check on Lucy, the sister of his closest friend Quentin, a fellow soldier who was killed nearly twenty years prior. When Lucy finds herself unmarried and pregnant, Coke doesn’t hesitate to help her even though it means putting himself in harm’s way.

    He has also taken in Dickon, a boy with both physical and mental disabilities, and will kill if need be to protect him. Coke is a criminal, but also a kind and gentle man. Pitman uses his remarkable abilities to stay ahead of his time with his crime scene investigations, and no one catches more thieves than him.  As a constable, he must shut up the homes of plague victims with their families inside – infected or not – causing great distress to the big-hearted Pitman. In his kindness, he can see the impossibility of Coke committing the terrible murders, and though the two fought on opposing sides in the war and now live on either side of the law, they develop an easy friendship, trusting each other with their very lives.

    Sarah Chalker owes much of her success as an actress to the protection of her husband, John. As childhood sweethearts, she and John have fought their way from the gutters of St. Giles to a place in the Duke’s Company, a theatre group frequented by Charles II himself. When John is killed, the sheer brutality of his murder drives Sarah on to find the vicious killer. She doesn’t hesitate to join with Coke and Pitman even though the search will put her in grave danger without the advantage of her male counterparts.

    Religion plays a huge role in the novel.

    On the heels of the English Civil War and the Restoration, London in 1665 is full of unrest. With the Act of Uniformity and the Act of Conventicles keeping dissenters from practicing anything other than the “accepted” Church of England within the city, all who choose to worship differently must do so in secret. This need for secrecy provokes many to violence, including the Fifth Monarchists, who seek to bring about the Apocalypse and the coming of Jesus.

    With the year 1666 fast approaching, the Fifth Monarchists find the end times in every facet of the city. From its sprawling corruption to its massive poverty, London yearns for its brand of justice and a crescendo to the devil’s time. Among these “Saints” the serial killer hides, committing his atrocities in the name of his religion. The religious symbolism connected to verses in Revelation truly takes this thriller into the realm of the sinister. Chapters from the murderer’s point of view show this obsession for Apocalyptic cleansing of the sinful falseness of London. This obsession contrasts sharply with Pitman’s own faith. Pitman, a Quaker and therefore a dissenter himself, uses his religion and beliefs to practice strength and kindness. The near-complete lack of religion in the other characters keenly expresses the duality of the novel.

    Plague takes the reader on a thrilling ride through the gritty parts of seventeenth-century London, and readers of history and mystery alike will enjoy its shocking twist ending.

     

     

    Chanticleer Book Reviews 5 Star Best Book silver foil sticker

     

     

  • WHAT THEY DON’T KNOW by K. V. Scruggs – Medical Thriller, Medical Mystery, Conspiracy Thrillers

    WHAT THEY DON’T KNOW by K. V. Scruggs – Medical Thriller, Medical Mystery, Conspiracy Thrillers

    Global Thriller Blue and gold badgeAuthor K. V. Scruggs proves that What They Don’t Know can kill. When left unchecked, public policy propelled by the best of intentions is still subject to the greed and corruption of those with the power to implement it. Scruggs takes us on a frightening journey where pervasive technology paired with behind-the-scenes corruption can hide grave results from the trusting, and now vulnerable, citizenry.

    Cheyenne Rose lives a glamorous life as a Talk Show Host who sensationalizes the stories of the guests interviewed on her program titled, ‘The Stories That Matter.’  The unexpected adventures of one family on her show irrevocably touch Cheyenne’s heart. She has no idea that her own life is about to be inextricably tied to them and their troubles.

    This young family’s infectious innocence and zest for life spread through Cheyenne and her audience. They attribute their blessings to the new government health care system that has implemented complete access to health care for all – including a life-saving surgery for one of their sons. Cheyenne reports that streamlined efficiencies built into this medical care solution are celebrated by patients, doctors, nurses, and practitioners. It almost seems too good to be true.

    In order to have the peace of mind that comes with such effective health care, small intrusions into individual privacy, hardly noticeable, are necessary. For example, the technology tracking your vital medical signs can dispense pharmaceuticals you may need. In addition, this miracle tech monitors an individual’s activities to ensure they get enough sleep, exercise, and, well, maybe also keeps track of other personal information.

    When an ugly surprise lay ahead for the guest family on Cheyenne’s show, events prompt her to ask questions that government officials don’t want to answer. But how can she stay one step ahead of a political adversary who knows her perhaps better than she knows herself? Now Cheyenne is plunged into the midst of a dangerous struggle that threatens the lives of those close to her, and ultimately her own.

    The author, a physician by day, threads her mastery of medical knowledge throughout this thrilling novel, making it terrifyingly believable. Her writing is suspenseful and exciting, with dynamic characters who heighten the fast-paced mystery.  K.V. Scruggs enjoys writing about thought-provoking medical issues, and the outcome is nothing short of a heart-pounding thriller.

    This dramatic tale explores what can be hidden within the deep, dark crevices of getting what you want.

    What They Don’t Know won 1st Place in the 2017 CIBAs in Global Thrillers Awards!

     

     

  • The CLUE AWARDS for Suspense/ Thriller Novels 2014 Official Finalist Listing

    The CLUE AWARDS for Suspense/ Thriller Novels 2014 Official Finalist Listing

    The CLUE Awards writing competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Suspense/Thriller Novels. The CLUE Awards is a division of the Chanticleer Awards International Writing Competitions.

    Clue Awards for Suspense Thriller NovelsWe are pleased to announce the CLUE Awards Official Finalists List for 2014 Entries, otherwise known as the “Short List.” The Official Finalists Listing is comprised of entries that have passed the first three rounds of judging from  the entire field of entrants. To pass the first three rounds of judging, more than sixty pages of the works below  have been read and have deemed worthy by the CBR judges of continuing in competition for the CLUE  FIRST IN CATEGORY positions and their prize packages.

    Congratulations to the CLUE AWARDS 2014 FINALISTS:

    • Rachel B. Ledge for The Red Ribbon 
    • Jay Rund for Fatal Feast 
    • Lawrence Verigin for Dark Seed
    • Pamela Beason for Shaken and The Only Clue
    • Michelle Daniel for The Red Circle  
    • Rebecca Nolen for Deadly Thyme
    • Ricardo M. Fleshman for The Dying Dance 
    • R. H. Yocum for Darkest Hour: A Tony Allison Thriller  
    • Mimi Barbour for Special Agent Francesca
    • Nancy Adair  for Soon Coming 
    • Martha Everhart Braniff for Broken Moon 
    • Charles Kowalski for Mind Virus
    • Bob LiVolsi  for Public Offerings Book 1: Birthright
    • Deborah Stevens  for The Serpent’s Disciple
    • James Gilliam for The SADM Project
    • Lynn Kennedy  for Deadly Provenance
    • Brandon Jett for Thanatos: Cheating the Ferryman
    • Jeff A. Clements for Aphilion
    • Gayle Nix Jackson for Orville Nix: The Missing JFK Assassination Film 
    • Wendy Dewar Hughes for The Glass Dolphin
    • Richard Mann for Film Shot 
    • Ian Bull for The Pictures Kill
    • S.L. Schultz for Little Shadow
    • Keith Dixon for The Bleak 
    • Jode Susan Millman for The Midnight Call
    • Janet K. Shawgo  for Find Me Again 
    • Alan Brenham for Cornered 
    • JoAnn Bassett for I’m Kona Love You Forever 
    • Karen Musser Nortman  for The Lady of the Lake
    • Sara Stamey  for Islands    
    • Fred Shackelford  for The Ticket    
    • Marilyn Larew for Spider Catchers 
    • Jessi Hersey for  Changing the Bloodline
    • M.K. Graff for The Scarlet Wench
    • J. Gunnar Grey for Trophies
    • Kaylin McFarren for Buried Threads
    • Michael Hicks Thompson for The Parchman Redeemer
    • James Edwards for The Deadening
    • D. J. Adamson for Admit to Mayhem
    • Leona DeRosa Bodie & G E Gardiner for Glimpse of Sunlight
    • Roni Teson for Twist
    • Corey Lynn Fayman for Border Field Blues

    Good luck to all the CLUE Awards Finalists who made the Short List as they compete for the First In Category Positions!

    More than $30,000 dollars in cash and prizes will be awarded to Chanticleer International Blue Ribbon Awards Winners annually.

    cac3The CLUE First in Category award winners will compete for the CLUE Grand Prize Award for Best Suspense/Thriller Book 2014. Grand Prize winners, blue ribbons, and prizes will be announced and awarded on September 29th at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala, Bellingham, Wash.

    The First In Category award winners will receive an award package including a complimentary book review, digital award badges, shelf talkers, book stickers, and more.

    We are now accepting entries into the 2015 CLUE Awards. The deadline is September  30, 2015. Click here for more information or to enter.

    More than $30,000 worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to the 2015 Chanticleer Novel Writing Competition winners! Ten genres to enter your novels and compete on an international level.

    Who will take home the $1,000 purse this September at the Chanticleer Awards Gala and Banquet?

    Last year’s Chanticleer Grand Prize winner was Michael Hurley for The Prodigal.

    Last year’s CLUE GRAND PRIZE Award winner was Clyde Curley  for Raggedy Man.

  • The WHEELS of CHANGE by Sandy Appleyard

    The WHEELS of CHANGE by Sandy Appleyard

    Wheels of Change, the latest in a trilogy of suspense novels by author Sandy Appleyard, opens with the fatal stabbing of a supposedly perfectly ordinary bank employee, investigated by two police detectives.

    Jake Campbell’s fellow employees have nothing bad to say about him, and the detectives uncover nothing in the bachelor’s background that would serve as a motive for murder. However, Jake is not who he appears to be at first glance, and through his misbehaviors, he caught the attention of a killer.

    From there, Appleyard interweaves the stories of a host of characters, most of whom have made bad choices in their lives, choices that have consequences. The main character, Simon Cross, a womanizing advertising executive, frequently acts with callous disregard toward others. His mother, a co-dependent drug addict, has problems of her own. Clara, an alcoholic and a cheating wife, is married to Max, a construction worker who has no qualms about attempting to murder Simon for sleeping with his spouse.

    As the cops investigate further, they shift their focus to Max, Clara’s husband. Before they can arrest him, Chase McCann, a noted sports journalist, is murdered, and Max goes on the run. They locate and arrest Max, but while he is in custody, a third murder of a prominent character occurs.

    Are the cops dealing with a serial killer? And if so, what ties the murders of these people together? How does the killer select his victims?

    Appleyard expertly draws together these disparate stories, seen primarily through the eyes of investigating detectives and Simon Cross, who struggles to recover from a debilitating car accident, hold his business together, and put his life back together.

    In a surprising twist, as Simon works to change and become a better person, he will face his greatest challenge yet, for the killer is closing in on his next victim.

    Wheels of Change grips you from the first page and doesn’t let go until the very last, leaving you gasping as you read the surprise ending. Appleyard proves that she has the talent to keep you guessing, and to teach some life lessons along the way.

  • The Official List of The CLUE Awards 2013 Finalists

    The Official List of The CLUE Awards 2013 Finalists

    The CLUE Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Thriller, Suspense, and Mystery Fiction. 

    magnifying-glassFinalists will compete for 1st Place Category positions. First Place Category winners will compete for The CLUE Awards Overall Best Book 2013.

    The CLUE  Awards 2013 for Thriller/Suspense/Mystery Fiction is a division of Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Awards Writing Competitions.

    These Finalists have made it through the first 3 rounds of competition. The first sixty to ninety pages of these works have been read; they are presently making the next series of rounds. From here on out, each round is increasingly more competitive as the judges determine if the works will move forward to best of category.

    We are honored to announce the Finalists of the CLUE Awards 2013. 

    CBR Official List of Titles & Authors Finalists for the CLUE  Awards 2013  are:

    • Small Town Storm by Elise K. Ackers
    • An Accusing Finger by Richard E. Gower
    • Death Over Easy by Toby Speed
    • Forevermore by JimMusgrave
    •  Disappearance by Jim Musgrave
    • Stray Cats by Geoffrey Mehl
    • Guarding Shakespeare by Quintin Peterson
    • Without Consent by Bev Irwin
    • The Space Between  by  Sydney T. Blake
    • Firetrap by Richard Mann
    • Beyond the Bridge by Tom MacDonald
    • Connections by Sandra Olson
    • Deadly Recall by Donnell Ann Bell
    • Parchman Preacher by Michael Hicks Thompson
    • Don’t Cry Over Killed Milk by Stephen Kaminski
    • Raggedy Man by Clyde Curley
    • The Grave Blogger by Donna D. Fontenot
    • Grind His Bones by Richard Newell Smith
    • Buried Threads by Kaylin McFarren
    • Poe, Nevermore by Rachel M.Martens
    • The Last Dance by Lonna Enox
    • Auditory Viewpoint by Lillian R. Melendez
    • Eleven by Carolyn Arnold
    • Trophies by  J. Gunnar Grey
    • Spiked by Sharron Gold
    • Fyre & Ice by Barbie Ray
    • Third Eye Witness by Kathy Bjorkman
    • Too Many Violins by Mark Reutlinger
    • The Politician’s Daughter by Marion Leigh
    • Blue Coyote by Karen Musser Nortman
    • Peete and Repeat by Karen Musser Nortman
    • Blue Coyote Hotel by Dianne Harman
    • Blue Coyote in Provence by Dianne Harman

    Now this is something to CROW about!

    Congratulations to the CLUE Awards 2013 Finalists!

    • Good luck to all in the next competitive rounds for 1st Place Categories!
    • 1st Place Category winners will be announced in approximately two months.

    We are now accepting entries into the Clue Awards for 2014.  Click here  for more info.

     

  • An Editorial Review of “Without Consent” by Bev Irwin

    An Editorial Review of “Without Consent” by Bev Irwin

    Bev Irwin immediately introduces her serial killer in Without Consent by having him carve out the kidney of a conscious woman. Irwin deftly interlaces Doctor Claire Valincourt, Detective Gerry Rosko, the numerous victims, and the killer himself in this descriptive medical-thriller.

    Dr. Claire Valincourt’s world changes after she finds the first body of a spree of killings, and she struggles to face death and horror outside of the sanitized environment of hospitals. Heading up the investigation is Detective Rosko, the surprisingly clement police officer who sparks with Valincourt from the moment they first shake hands. Their growing relationship is dogged by death and danger.

    Irwin presents a wide cast of memorable characters in Without Consent. From a charismatic sketch artist, to reporters that just don’t know when to quit, Irwin organizes the plot so that not a strand is out of place, and most everything dovetails. The terror of Rosko and Doctor Valincourt surrounded by suspects, one of whom is a brutal murderer, gives their lives a level of tension that could be cut with a scalpel.

    Suspense devotees will appreciate the details revealed about the killer’s inner workings. The foreshadowing at the beginning also points to Rosko and Valincourt being thrown together, and with each missing kidney, their romance blossoms against recent personal wounds and professional instinct. The effect could be considered comical if it was not for the constant threat of a brutal death looming over their shoulders.

    The story takes on even more of a sense of urgency as Rosko realizes the athletic brunettes who are piling up, sans one kidney, look suspiciously like Valincourt. The murders begin to be personal and move closer to home as they slide into the social circle of both characters. They fight and scrape to stay alive while closing in on the killer.

    Without Consent’s strengths are highlighted in its multifaceted characters. Valincourt, despite severe trauma in her past, rarely is a damsel in distress, and Rosko isn’t just a stereotypical detective, but has a gentle side and a solid presence that serves as a sea of calm in all the chaos.

    The journey into the killer’s mind always leaves the reader feeling unclean. Each point of progression fits logically when presented by a deranged, methodical man. Occasionally, the extra knowledge held by the reader sends shivers down the spine as the police cannot manage to see or prevent disaster before it happens.

    With each kidney the killer takes, he becomes more confident and certain that his path is the right one, while Rosko and Valincourt become more determined to discover any information on how to stop him.

    Despite some heavy foreshadowing, Without Consent will have you reading to the end. And, as in this case, knowing increases the pleasure of each tiny reveal that is carved out with Irwin’s razor sharp writing…like finding the perfect kidney at the end of a long day.