About Humans, Practicing
A North Korean defector and cyber warrior, Min Gyu, decides to use Navy Trent as his ticket out of the backwards regime. Min Gyu promises he can destroy North Korea’s nuclear weapons program. But only if Jackson retrieves him. Navy must decide how much she’s willing to risk for a stranger, and how many of her principles she’s willing to sacrifice to bring Jackson home.
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Author Bio:
I’ve been writing since I jotted down a story about a talking hamburger on the pages of my father’s day planner when I was six. During college, I was published as an academic and as a short story writer.
Now I write technothrillers. But I’d like to think they’re not just thrillers. They’re a touch literary, because that’s how I started. A little feminist, because I apologize less these days. Very technical, because details are important.
I genuinely believe well-written stories are a tool for self-reflection and improvement. We never see ourselves clearly, but sometimes we get a glimpse of ourselves in a character. Stories let us process our emotions, wrestle with hard decisions, and explore the consequences of our actions.
The stories we tell ourselves matter because that is how we make and remake ourselves. Telling (and reading) meaningful stories is how we get a better understanding of experiences we haven’t lived.
And that matters a lot.