Hello cupcakes,
Today we have an exciting spotlight and guest post. Please Join Kimmy and I in saying welcome and thank you to Allen Wyler for joining us today :).
Rinny
The first of a series of stand-alone medical thrillers.
Synopsis
Faced with a dangerous reality but determined to succeed, Ritter turns to his long-time colleague, corporate biotech CEO Richard Stillman, for help. Together, they conspire to conduct a clandestine clinical trial in Seoul, Korea. But the danger is more determined, and more lethal, than Ritter could have imagined.
After successful surgical trials, Ritter and his allies are thrown into a horrifying nightmare scenario: The trial patients have been murdered and Ritter is the number one suspect. Aided by his beautiful lab assistant, Yeonhee, Ritter flees the country, now the target of an international manhunt involving Interpol, the FBI, zealous fanatics and a coldly efficient assassin named Fiest.
Guest Post
Thanks for asking
me to talk about Dead End Deal, a
thriller that takes place in both Seattle and Seoul, South Korea.
WHAT IS YOUR WRITING RITUAL? WHY IS THAT IMPORTANT AND
HOW HAS BEING SURGEON SHAPED IT?
For me writing is
a difficult process that takes discipline. First thing I do every morning is
pour a cup of coffee and sit down in front of my computer, the door to the room
shut, the blinds drawn. No distractions. Then I get to work. One to four hours
every day, no exceptions. Each day I set a goal and don’t quit until I reach
that goal. If it takes the whole four hours, fine. If it takes only two hours,
even better. But the point is I work at it daily. So what does this have to do
with being a surgeon? Well, surviving neurosurgical training took a great deal
of motivation and self-discipline. It taught me that I could succeed at a task
if I gave it 100% effort. As far as how my career might flavor my writing, I
think being a neurosurgeon given me a wealth of experience on which to base
some pretty interesting stories.
WHAT WAS THE
RESEARCH BEHIND DEAD END DEAL?
This is a
blitz-pace thriller about a Seattle neurosurgeon who, while in Korea, is framed
for a murder. Now hunted by police he must evade a professional hit man while
trying to find a way back to the United States. I figure it’s Three Days of The
Condor meets Michael Crichton.
I got the idea
for the story when I was a guest lecturer at a medical school in Seoul, South
Korea. I was staying at the Walker Hill Sheraton hotel across the Han River
from the hospital. So all the scenes (hotel, downtown Seoul, and the Korean
hospital) were from notes and snapshots I took while there. (I always travel
with a small point and shoot camera in my pocket). The brief description of the
surgical procedure comes from my own experience.
My neurosurgeon
protagonist, Jon Ritter, escapes via a route I personally took when figuring
out how he might return to the United States without a passport. Again, the
scenes were written with the help of snapshots. So, the short answer to the
question is that all the research for the story came from personal experience.
By the way, I find digital photography a great help when writing. I view a
relevant snapshot on the screen as I write. This help me accurately describe
what I’m seeing.
WHAT ARE THE
CHALLENGES OF WRITING A MEDICAL THRILLER?
People who read medical thrillers are usually interested in medical
details, just as readers of legal thrillers find law interesting. What is
difficult is adding sufficient medical detail to satisfy a reader without
making descriptions or facts boring. This is one reason I try to move my
stories along at a fast clip. Thrillers are intended to thrill, not lecture.
Fast pace, good plot, interesting characters are the elements that should be in
a medical thriller.
WHAT MADE YOU
TAKE THE PATH FROM NEUROSURGEON TO AUTHOR AND WHAT WERE YOUR BIGGEST
CHALLENGES?
Writing always
interested me. Even in grade school I read like a fiend. So it seemed like a
good idea to major in English instead of the traditional chemistry or zoology
when I was taking my pre-med courses. This caused me considerable grief because
it was difficult to get in all my required credits. But I figured once I got
into medical school I’d never have another shot at the literature courses. And
that’s exactly what happened —medical school and post graduate training
consumed all my time. Then one Saturday, after starting practice, I came home
from making rounds at the hospital and decided to start writing. Just like
that. I began a novel that ended up to be really awful. Then I wrote another
one, which was better but still not ready for prime time. At that point I
started trolling for an agent and finally secured one, but could not sell my
work. Years later, I got the call I’d been waiting for. It was quite a thrill.
I guess, in the end, my biggest challenge was finding enough time to devote to
writing. For me the writing process is difficult and requires a ton of work. I
now enjoy the luxury of having sufficient time to work on my craft. It’s a
dream come true.
HOW DOES ALZHEIMERS RANK AS ONE OF THE
MOST PRESSING DISEASES IN THE 21ST CENTURY? WHY AND IF IT GOES UNCHECKED
HOW WILL IT IMPACT OUR SOCIETY? (IS THERE ANY PROGRESS ON FINDING A CURE?)
Chances are you know someone among who
either has Alzheimer’s Disease or is directly connected—by relation or care—to
someone who has it. As of this year an
estimated 5.4 million Americans are living with AD. That translates to roughly
one in eight older Americans. That’s a
staggering number, but yet in the public consciousness, AD isn’t as widely
considered (“top of mind”) as the dangerous killer that it is; not like say,
cancer or heart failure. (AD is the
sixth leading cause of death in the US).
The fact is, neurodegenerative diseases
such as Parkinson’s disease and Alzheimer’s disease are becoming more prevalent
as the average life span of individuals increase and the more common health
care problems ARE better treated. It’s predicted that by 2020, thanks to drugs
like Lipitor, mortality from heart disease and stroke will be way down, making
Alzheimer’s the leading cause of death in our time. The personal consequences to individuals or
families is devastating, but the general consequence to society as a whole is
great as well. That’s because AD
patients often live a long time, their care is very expensive and will become a
major health issue (both in cost and quality of life) that our society will
have to bear.
There is hope in some novel drugs to treat
AD. Because the disease results from the build up of Amyloid in nerve cells, a
promising approach is to block the production of this protein. In addition,
there is intriguing research into the concept of surgically implanting stem
cells into especially damaged brain areas.
This possible cure is a central element that I used in the plot for my
new novel, Dead End Deal.
Cures and treatments for diseases like AD
are very expensive to develop, (millions upon tens of millions of dollars of
R&D) with the resulting payoff even greater (billions of dollars of revenue
for the “drug” or the “procedure”) often creating entire new branches of
medicine, with thousands upon thousands of new jobs. This high risk / high reward fact of life for
medical researchers and practitioners like me is a natural stage for heroes,
villains and high-stakes drama. I try to
capture that in my Thrillers, but the true high-stakes drama on the medical
treatment/development stage is much more exciting than any fiction; the heroes
are by far much more worthy of praise (though they often go unnoticed). I like to see my books as homage to them, at
least in some small way.
Purchase Links
Dead End Deal, along with Allen Wyler's other e-books (Dead Ringer, Dead Wrong, Deadly Errors) are on a promo offer at $0.99, through the entire month of October.
About the Author
Allen Wyler is a renowned neurosurgeon who earned an international reputation for pioneering surgical techniques to record brain activity. He has served on the faculties of both the University of Washington and the University of Tennessee, and in 1992 was recruited by the prestigious Swedish Medical Center to develop a neuroscience institute.
In 2002, he left active practice to become Medical Director for a startup med-tech company (that went public in 2006) and he now chairs the Institutional Review Board of a major medical center in the Pacific Northwest.
Leveraging a love for thrillers since the early 70’s, Wyler devoted himself to fiction writing in earnest, eventually serving as Vice President of the International Thriller Writers organization for several years. After publishing his first two medical thrillers Deadly Errors (2005) and Dead Head (2007), he officially retired from medicine to devote himself to writing full time.
He and his wife, Lily, divide their time between Seattle and the San Juan Islands.
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