Showing posts with label Medical Thriller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Medical Thriller. Show all posts

The Story Behind The Panacea Project by Catherine Devore Johnson

 


 



The Story Behind The Panacea Project by Catherine Devore Johnson

The Panacea Project tells the story of Calla Hammond, a young woman who discovers that her immune system holds the key to curing cancer. She agrees to take part in a research study dedicated to harnessing the potential in her blood and bone marrow, but things fall apart when news about the study goes public and people become desperate to use Calla as a means to their own ends.


Although the vast majority of the plot in The Panacea Project is pure fiction, the core of the story is based on real experiences. As a young adult, I struggled with hypochondria. When I was feeling particularly anxious about an ache or vague discomfort, I would convince myself that it was cancer. (Unfettered access to WebMD’s symptom checkers did not help things.) I also had (have) an
overactive imagination, and sometimes wondered if maybe I really was getting cancer over and over again, and my immune system was curing it. Eventually, I tamed the hypochondria and my crazy notion about cancer and immune systems filed itself away in a back corner of my mind.
 

In the meantime, my family experienced an actual health emergency. Ten years ago this May, my husband was diagnosed with testicular cancer and had surgery to remove the tumor. The day I brought him home from the hospital, I learned that a friend from high school had been diagnosed with stage 4 gastric cancer and was in hospice. She died a few days later. The double whammy of her death and my husband’s diagnosis sent me into a tailspin.
 

My only comfort during this difficult time was the news that my husband’s cancer was early-stage with no evidence of spread. His oncologist recommended strict surveillance (scans and blood work every few months), but no chemotherapy or radiation treatment. My husband was diligent about going to his follow-up appointments and, as time went on, we hoped he had the cancer beat. A year and a half after his diagnosis, though, we got the news that it had recurred in an abdominal lymph node. My husband underwent proton
radiation therapy and has been cancer-free since his last round of treatment.

All in all, we were incredibly lucky. The cancer was detected early, it was highly treatable, and we had access to some of the best medical care in the United States. But the experience was still harrowing and it made a deep impression on me.


It probably won’t come as much of a surprise to learn that once things in my life settled down and I felt ready to do some creative writing again, that old cancer/immune system idea dusted itself off and started demanding my attention. It wasn’t long before Calla’s story began to take shape on the page.
 

The words poured out of me—clearly filling a need to process the pain and loss we had experienced—and, a little over a year later, The Panacea Project emerged, an exploration of self-sacrifice and a tribute to my husband, my friend, and so many others who have battled cancer.

 

 

Calla Hammond has always been a loner—a product of the foster system and avoided by others because of a skin condition. When doctors discover her immune system holds the key to curing cancer, she struggles to advance lifesaving research in a world that sees her only as a means to an end. Yet along the way, Calla gains the one thing she has always longed for: a chosen family. But when a group of unscrupulous people join forces to sell Calla’s blood to the highest bidder, she has to dig deep to find the strength to retake control of her life, her body, and her story.

Release Date: February 28, 2023

Publisher:  Greenleaf Book Group

Hard Cover: ISBN: 978-0-9858579-9-8; 304 pages; $24.95

Amazon: https://amzn.to/3UlNJW4


 

Catherine Devore Johnson is a former attorney turned writer. Her work has won or placed in competitions held by the Houston Writer’s Guild and the Writer’s League of Texas, and she has published an essay in The Houston Chronicle about caring for her mother after two strokes. She works as a writer and editor at a children’s hospital and lives in Houston with her husband and two children. The Panacea Project is her first novel.

Website:  https://www.cdjohnsonauthor.com/

Twitter:   https://twitter.com/cdjohnsonauthor

 

 

 Quote of the Day:

"Books are a uniquely portable magic."

-- Stephen King

 

 


The Story Behind Erica Rosen MD Trilogy by Deven Greene

 







The Story Behind Erica Rosen MD Trilogy 
By Deven Greene

I often thought about writing something in the medical thriller genre, as I’m a physician and scientist (biochemist). The idea to write about genetic engineering, the subject of the first book in the trilogy, Unnatural, seemed like a good place to start. After all, genetic engineering is in the news a lot, and much has been written about future possibilities for this exciting new technique. The story came to me in a flash—a Chinese girl with blue eyes (Chinese people don’t have blue eyes—usually brown, rarely green, but not blue). Now I had my general plot. All I had to do was come up with the characters and the details.

You can surmise by now that my writing is plot-driven rather than character-driven. Despite that, I put a great deal of thought into my characters. They need to fit the story as well as have a life outside of the


problem at hand.

For Unnatural, I decided the best person to become entangled in the plot would be a pediatrician. Not just any pediatrician, but an intelligent, caring doctor. I needed her to have a particular interest in special needs children, as she would be the one to look after the autistic youth in the second book, Unwitting (see below). I conjured up Erica Rosen, a San Francisco pediatrician who came across blue-eyed Wang Shu in her clinic. Wang Shu’s mother had brought her there because she needed a health form filled out to start school.

The second book deals with autism. The main person Erica deals with, a young autistic man, is based on one of my sons. The abilities and behavior of the book character are as close to my son’s as I could make them. Both are autistic, with limited ability to communicate. Unlike the higher functioning autistic individuals usually featured on television, they must rely on people for their care. Like some, but not all autistic individuals, however, they have certain splinter skills, which often surprise people. I can ask my son what he had for dinner on a specific night five years ago, and he can tell me (I sometimes write such things down to check his memory because I don't remember


those details).

The third book deals with pharmaceutical production. While the FDA does its best to regulate this industry, there have been failures. I believe significant slip-ups are less frequent than they have been in the past, at least in developed countries. However, there are still ways to work around the safeguards in place.

My writing sometimes requires me to research the science behind the stories, as well as the culture and location of the characters. I enjoy this, and I hope that in addition to appreciating a good story, my readers look forward to learning about new things as much as I do.

 

Dr. Erica Rosen is perplexed when she sees a young Chinese girl with blue eyes in her San Francisco pediatrics clinic. The girl’s mother, Ting, is secretive, and Erica suspects she has entered the country illegally. Later, Erica encounters Ting’s son and discovers he has an unusual mutation. Erica learns that Ting’s children underwent embryonic stem cell gene editing as part of a secret Chinese government-run program.

The Chinese government wants to murder Ting’s son to prevent others from learning about his unusual mutation and the secret gene-editing program. At Ting’s urging, Erica heads to China to expose the program and rescue the infant Ting was forced to leave behind, all while attempting to evade the watchful eye of the Chinese government.

Book Information

Release Date: January 7, 2021

Publisher:  Black Rose Writing

Soft Cover: 289 pages; $4.53; eBook $4.65; Free with Kindle Unlimited

Amazon: https://amzn.to/3wv8hlN  

Black Rose Writing: https://www.blackrosewriting.com/thrillers/unnatural?rq=deven%20gree

 

Dr. Erica Rosen’s world is turned upside down after a suicide bomber explodes amidst a large crowd entering Oracle Park baseball stadium, near her San Francisco home. Many are killed or injured, and police have no leads in solving the case.

Erica becomes involved after a teacher of young autistic men contacts her. The teacher believes her students are involved in the bombing but is afraid to contact law enforcement. She reaches out to Erica, who has experience with special needs children. 

Erica arrives at the school but finds the police already there and a young autistic man doing a jigsaw puzzle, oblivious to his murdered teacher on the floor. The young man has information about the mastermind behind the bombing but has limited ability to speak. Erica is determined to protect him, prevent further bombings, and find his missing classmates.

Book Information

Release Date: October 21, 2021

Publisher:  Black Rose Writing

Soft Cover: 281 pages; $17.38; eBook $4.99; FREE on Kindle Unlimited

Amazon: https://amzn.to/3qe4zJP 

Black Rose Writing:

https://www.blackrosewriting.com/thrillers/unwitting?rq=deven%20greene 

 

Pediatrician Erica Rosen is stymied when two of her patients don’t respond to medicine as expected. When other patients later develop strange, unexpected illnesses, she is determined to get to the bottom of it.

Meanwhile, the department’s newest pediatrician, Dr. Nilsen, appears to be trying to steal her patients. Erica suspects he is after her job as the clinic director. She also discovers Dr. Nilsen has become romantically involved with her trusted assistant, Martha. One evening, while looking for patient information on Martha’s desk, Erica comes across a list with the names of some of her patients. A boy who recently became ill with a mysterious malady is on the list and has an asterisk by his name. What does that mean?

Erica is convinced something nefarious is underfoot, and Dr. Nilsen, rather than simply being after her job, is engaged in a dangerous scheme involving her patients. Unable to recruit the help of law enforcement in a timely manner, she realizes she must take matters into her own hands. As she proceeds with her investigation, she is unaware of the dangers she is about to encounter.

Book Information

Release Date: August 18, 2022

Publisher:  Black Rose Writing

Soft Cover: 329 pages; $21.95; eBook $6.99; FREE on Kindle Unlimited

Amazon: https://amzn.to/3Tp8u3J 

Black Rose Writing:

https://www.blackrosewriting.com/thrillers/unforeseen?rq=deven%20greene





Fiction writer Deven Greene lives in the San Francisco Bay area. Ever since childhood, Deven has been interested in science.  After receiving a doctorate in biochemistry, she went to medical school and trained as a pathologist. She worked for several decades in that field before starting to write fiction. Deven incorporates elements of medicine or science in most of her writing. She has published several short stories. Her debut novel, Unnatural, is the first book of the Erica Rosen MD Trilogy, and was released in January 2021. Unwitting, released in October 2021, is the second Erica Rosen MD novel. Unforeseen is the final book in the Trilogy.

Visit her website at www.devengreene.com or connect with her on Twitter and Instagram.