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Utopia

Utopia~ A new world was the mission. A secret civilization no one knew about changed everything.

When Dr. Delilah Dweck, a decorated physician, boards the first manned mission to Mars, she’s chasing the dream of discovery. Alongside her is an astrobiologist, Dr. Jacob Stern, and a handpicked team of elite scientists, each prepared to leave Earth behind forever. Their mission: to build a permanent colony and turn the barren red planet into humanity’s next home.

Mars holds secrets far older—and far stranger—than anyone could have imagined. Beneath the dust lies a thriving ancient civilization: the Xan’tains. Not only are they alive, they claimed to have seeded Earth millions of years ago—and now, they’re ready to reclaim their descendants.

The price of survival? Reproduction. Each astronaut must help populate the colony, either biologically or through artificial means. Their children, born of Mars and Earth, exhibit extraordinary abilities—abilities the Xan’tains see as the next evolution.

As the colony expands beyond Mars and into the stars, the crew discovers a powerful galactic federation balancing diplomacy and domination. But when Delilah uncovers a conspiracy that threatens to shatter this fragile peace, the true test begins. Can Delilah protect both her people and the future they’re building—or will Utopia collapse under the weight of its own creation?

A sweeping saga of interstellar discovery, ancient power, and the fragile hope of unity. Utopia is perfect for fans of The Expanse and The Three-Body Problem.

This Book Scared Me

Jenny Ahmed Author Interview

By Dawn’s Early Light follows a forensic pathologist and her assistant as they try desperately to make sense of the utter wasteland in which they have found themselves stranded. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

This is an interesting story. I have a summer house in the Adirondack mountains and there is a story or urban legend (don’t know which), there was a CIA black site in the town of Indian Lakes. Rather than tell you the story, you should read it for yourself: Indian Lake Project. I mixed that in with research I did on radiation. There are items that are naturally radioactive: kitty litter, bananas, Brazilian nuts, and a few other items. I mixed it all up and the book was born. I will tell you this book scared me when I was writing it because it could really happen. Also, a couple of months ago, there was a story in the news about a man preparing to plant a bomb under the NYSE. One thing I do is research topics heavily and I am frightened the book I spent a year writing was coming true!

What is it about dystopian fiction that intrigues you?

I am shocked at all the ways humanity can die. This is probably the only genre that doesn’t need a bad guy! It could be a weather phenomenon, earthquake, asteroid, you name it!

What’s the most difficult thing about writing characters who exist in a world so different from our own?

Actually, in most dystopian books, generally, everything starts out normal. I try to get all of my science research on point as much as possible. The one thing I do enjoy in my books is giving the message of hope. Regardless of how life changes, everyone on earth has hopes and dreams. In my books, I relay the message of hope.

Can fans look forward to seeing more releases from you soon? What are you currently working on?

I’ve since released Seismic Eruptions. That has been doing well on Amazon. My latest work that will be coming out in the next two weeks is Utopia. This is the first book of a trilogy about the first manned mission to Mars. I had such a great time learning about what the astronauts go through! This was the most fun book I wrote and it’s also the largest! Book 1 turned out to be 850 pages, but I pared it down to 600 pages. I want to bring it down to around 400 words.

Author Links: GoodReads | X (Twitter) | Facebook | Website | Amazon

The world shatters before dawn’s first light. Nuclear explosions erupt across America, turning cities into desolate wastelands and silencing communications. Dr. Sasha Cohen, a relentless FBI forensic pathologist, finds herself navigating the chaos alongside her assistant, the resourceful Jake Campbell. Their routine investigation collides with catastrophe when they stumble upon Leila, an enigmatic teen, amidst the ruins of a decimated city block.

With lives hanging by a thread and panic spreading, Sasha and Jake uncover a chilling truth: a shadowy cabal orchestrates the devastation, with their sights set on total annihilation. As they untangle the web of deceit, the sinister figure of Mustafa looms, his hand at the helm of destruction beneath the New York Stock Exchange’s crumbling foundations.

Racing against time and against those who profit from chaos, Sasha must confront the darkness threatening to consume her country. Each step forward is a step deeper into a world where allegiances shift like sand, and trust is a rare commodity. Will Sasha and Jake uncover the forces that threaten to destroy America, or will the darkness swallow them whole before dawn breaks again?

By Dawn’s Early Light

By Dawn’s Early Light opens with a shipping container marked with harmless cargo—kitty litter, hazelnuts, and bananas—and spirals into a jaw-dropping apocalyptic thriller. A nuclear attack levels America’s major cities in a matter of minutes, and from there, chaos reigns. Through the eyes of Jack, Mohammad, Sasha, and Jake, readers are dragged into a gritty, horrifying world where society crumbles fast and quietly, and the line between survival and humanity fades just as quickly.

Jenny Ahmed’s writing is intense. The buildup in the prologue is deceptively calm: Jack’s container pickup feels routine, almost boring until this gnawing unease sets in. That feeling never really leaves. Mohammad’s moment with the button, the memory of his daughter Leila, and his final “Forgive me, Leila” just gutted me. It’s brutal, heartbreaking, and somehow still grounded in something deeply human. The whole detonation scene was visceral. Every paragraph punches you in the gut with imagery so vivid it borders on cinematic.

But what really surprised me was how the tone shifts post-blast. The pacing slows down a bit and becomes almost eerily quiet, just like the abandoned cities Sasha and Jake find themselves in. The creeping dread of walking through empty buildings, the discovery of the almost zombie-like infected people, the weird stillness of Albany—that got under my skin. Sasha’s logical, methodical background as an FBI forensic pathologist clashes beautifully with the utter irrationality of what’s unfolding. The horror isn’t just in the destruction, it’s in what’s left behind. Ahmed makes the reader sit with the silence, the unknown, the rot. It’s not just about surviving; it’s about understanding what kind of world you’re surviving in now.

By Dawn’s Early Light isn’t simply a disaster novel. It’s about fear, helplessness, and the slow unraveling of reality. The writing is raw, the characters feel like real people making terrible decisions under impossible pressure, and the tension never lets go. I’d recommend this sci-fi book to fans of post-apocalyptic thrillers, especially those who like The Road or Station Eleven but want a little more fire.

Pages: 229 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DPLKXNYY

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By Dawn’s Early Light

Jenny Ahmed’s By Dawn’s Early Light is a gut-wrenching thriller that throws readers headfirst into a world unraveling at the seams. It begins with a seemingly routine shipment at the Port of New York, just another night, another job, and another cargo manifest listing the mundane: kitty litter, hazelnuts, and bananas. But beneath that everyday veneer, something sinister lurks. As the story unfolds, the stakes skyrocket in a terrifyingly plausible doomsday scenario. A nuclear attack on American soil shatters life as we know it, leaving behind a silent, scorched wasteland where the rules of survival have changed. What follows is a gripping tale of chaos, fear, and the desperate fight to understand what happened and, more importantly, what comes next.

What struck me first was the sheer weight of the opening chapters. The eerie calm before the storm and the quiet tension as Jack picks up an unassuming shipment build an undeniable sense of dread. Ahmed’s writing is visceral, immediate, and cinematic. She doesn’t just tell you that something is wrong; she makes you feel it, in the tightening grip of Jack’s paranoia, in the silence that feels too thick, in the way shadows seem to stretch just a little too long. The moment of impact, when the bombs detonate, is nothing short of breathtaking. The descriptions are brutal: New York reduced to ash, people vaporized in an instant, the sheer force of destruction wiping away lives like they were never there. It’s horrifying, yet impossible to look away.

Beyond the spectacle of destruction, the book shines in its portrayal of human resilience, or lack thereof. Take Mohammad, a character whose inner turmoil is as gripping as the apocalypse itself. His finger hovers over a button, the weight of an entire country’s fate pressing down on his trembling hand. He’s not a villain in the traditional sense. He’s a man consumed by forces bigger than himself, trapped in a web of manipulation, fear, and a desperate, misplaced sense of duty. His final moments before he presses that button are some of the most chilling in the book, not because of what he does, but because of how painfully real his thought process feels. His story isn’t just about terrorism; it’s about desperation, coercion, and the terrifying ease with which someone can be turned into a weapon.

Then there’s Sasha and Jake, two people thrown into a world where nothing makes sense anymore. Their journey through the ruins of a dead city is filled with haunting imagery, the sky an unnatural shade of orange, the streets eerily silent, entire cities wiped clean of life. But what makes their story compelling isn’t just the horror; it’s the uncertainty. They don’t know what’s happening. The world they knew is gone, and all they can do is run, searching for answers, for safety, for something that feels real again. The tension is persistent, especially when they encounter the sheriff, sick, hollow-eyed, and barely human. The realization that this isn’t just about bombs, but about something far worse, hits like a gut punch.

If there’s one thing this book does masterfully, it’s keeping the reader on edge. Every time you think you understand the scope of the disaster, Ahmed pulls the rug out from under you. It’s not just New York. It’s not just Washington. It’s everywhere. The slow, horrifying realization that civilization as we know it has ended seeps into every page. And then there’s the creeping horror of what comes next—the people left behind, the sickness, the way death lingers in the air. The world doesn’t just collapse in fire; it unravels, leaving behind something unfamiliar, something wrong. And yet, in the middle of all this destruction, the question remains: who did this? And why?

By Dawn’s Early Light is not for the faint of heart. It’s raw, relentless, and deeply unsettling. But it’s also one of those books that sticks with you long after you’ve turned the last page. If you’re a fan of apocalyptic thrillers with a razor-sharp edge—think The Road meets Tom Clancy—this one’s for you. Just be prepared: it doesn’t pull its punches. And once you step into this world, you won’t come out the same.

Pages: 229 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DPLKXNYY

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The Tough Mama’s Guide to Survival: Survive & Thrive

A disaster happens, can you and your family survive? Where will you go? What will you eat? How will you continue to eat when your supplies are exhausted? How will you meet the medical needs of your family? How will you and your family survive when help is on the way? Being prepared is like having a life-saving insurance policy. If the worst case scenario hits, it is too late to prepare. The time to prepare is now. Even the government is now telling the public to store extra food, water, and medical supplies. If the worst happens, are you prepared to deal with a new reality with no help coming your way?

Tough Mama is a guide for the Mama of every family. You will learn:
– How to begin being prepared
– Finding a safe spot for your family
– Where to buy your Safe Spot for pennies on the dollar
– A comprehensive list of where you can continue to learn for free, including topics on building a garden, learn how to limit radiation to your family, how to be safe during a nuclear blast, and many other topics
– The best ways to build your food store
– Emergency first aid
– Building a survival garden
– Be prepared for nuclear war, fallout, and radiation

Tough Mama shows you many more things not found in other survival books or sites. Every tip has been tried and tested.

Tough Mama saw a need in the prepping community – Women! As guardians of the family, the woman needs to be at the forefront of knowledge and not have to rely on anyone. 46% of households are led by women. This is a time that more women are the heads of households, and it is time women are empowered to protect themselves. Tough Mama wants to see a prepared and educated person in every home.

The maze of survival planning and education can seem overwhelming for the beginner – not so with Tough Mama! Tough Mama starts at the very basics and walks the reader through more complex subjects. All topics are broken down into steps that will ensure safety and success to your planning. Survive and thrive!

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