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Propulsive Stories
Posted by Literary-Titan
Stolen follows a brilliant, tough, and resourceful private investigator with a powerful AI who helps a woman being stalked for her new EV battery, when it snowballs out of control into blackmail, espionage, and an underground crime ring aided by a rival AI. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
This question goes to the heart of how I write. Sometimes I start a chapter with only a vague idea of what I want to accomplish. When it’s done, more than I expected ends up on the page. For example, in Stolen, a deadly international assassin targets the protagonist and her client. Until the moment I started writing that chapter, there was no assassin, not even the concept of one. My creative process is fluid and more creative as I go. I never outline my stories or rely on pages of story notes. I start with a loose story framework, define the characters, and then let them loose. I’m sometimes surprised when a twist I hadn’t intended to write suddenly appears. If I like the twist and think it enhances the story, I leave it in and make whatever adjustments are necessary to accommodate it. For my book, Stolen, I didn’t have a distinct element of inspiration; I just had a general idea. However, as this is the third book in the series, the characters were already well-known to me. This familiarity made it easier to tell the story.
The supporting characters in this novel, I thought, were intriguing and well-developed. Who was your favorite character to write for?
Molly, with her massive AI brain, is always fun to write for. In this book, I explore why Molly is motivated to work with humans, rather than trying to wipe out humanity, as some people fear the technology may one day do.
How did you balance the action scenes with the story elements and still keep a fast pace in the story?
I intentionally write all of my books with pace in mind. My favorite line in a review is this: “…I couldn’t put the book down,” or “It kept me up late into the night.” As a reader myself, I enjoy propulsive stories. I want my readers to experience that sensation.
Can you tell us more about what’s in store for Riley Callen and the direction of the next book?
I’m taking a break from this series, but I’ll definitely return to it in the future. These great characters have many more stories to tell. When I do return to the series, the next book already has a title: Quantum. If you think AI’s potential is scary, wait until you see an AI installed on a quantum computer. It’s not hyperbole to say the tech could break the world.
Author Links: Amazon
However, when a Chinese conglomerate purchases the company, Lena learns there will be no payday. The new owner is not liable for the contract she’d negotiated with the old management. Frustrated but determined to change her luck, she revises her original design and substantially extends the battery’s range. She intends to sell the new design to a competing company, which will render her old design obsolete. But it soon becomes clear that the Chinese company that acquired her battery design has become aware of her plan and is surveilling her wherever she goes. Fearful for her safety, Lena contacts Riley Callen and asks for help. Riley and her AI associate Molly quickly intercede, diffuse the situation, and get Lena the money she’s owed.
Thinking the case is resolved, Riley returns to assisting the FBI with capturing a highly organized crew of kidnappers. The Feds had made no progress on the case until Riley and Molly started working on it. Molly quickly discovers the kidnappers have an AI of their own coordinating the logistics of the kidnappings. This allows those in charge to get rich while simultaneously distancing themselves from their crimes and the criminals they employ to do the dirty work.
While embroiled in her work with the FBI, Molly reports that the man running the corrupt Chinese company, Mr. Shi, has contracted an international assassin named The Black Dragon to kill Riley and her client, Lena Alton. Not wanting to stop chasing the kidnappers, who are promising violence against future hostages if the FBI continues to interfere with their crimes, Riley brings in her Special Ops friends, Carnivore and Vegas, to help her dispatch the assassin before he can do any harm.
The clock is ticking on both cases, and Riley will have to work faster than ever to stop these bad guys.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: action, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, Paul Chandler, read, reader, reading, series, Stolen, story, suspense, thrillers, Thrillers & Suspense, writer, writing
Stolen
Posted by Literary Titan

After reading Stolen by Paul Chandler, the third installment in the Riley Callen series, I found myself genuinely hooked. This book kicks off with Lena Alton, an electrical engineer, being stalked by agents of a Chinese conglomerate who stole her revolutionary EV battery design. Enter Riley Callen, a brilliant, tough, and resourceful private investigator with a powerful AI named Molly at her side. What starts as a corporate theft case snowballs into an international standoff involving blackmail, espionage, and artificial intelligence. The narrative splits into two main arcs: the battery showdown and a dark, layered kidnapping case involving an underground crime ring aided by a rival AI. The pace never lets up, and each chapter tightens the grip a little more.
What I loved most was the writing. Chandler doesn’t waste words, but he doesn’t skimp on texture either. His characters have depth without melodrama. Riley is smart and sharp without being a cliché, and her interactions with Molly add this sly, futuristic energy that still feels grounded. The humor is dry and quick, and it shows up at just the right times. And Molly, the AI sidekick, might just be my favorite character. The way Chandler builds tension through dialogue and lean, action-heavy scenes kept me flipping pages late into the night. I also appreciated how Chandler made tech accessible. I never felt lost in jargon, but the stakes still felt serious.
The book leans into a familiar hero-vs-powerful-evil trope, and there are moments where Riley’s almost-too-perfect mastery of every situation stretches belief. Still, I didn’t mind. Chandler writes Riley with enough heart and wit that I was willing to go along for the ride. I was especially intrigued by the moral undertones. Like how Riley operates outside the law but with a fierce sense of justice, and how AI, depending on who programs it, can be either savior or predator. There’s a commentary here on corporate, technological, institutional power, and what it means to outsmart it when you’re one person (with an AI and some nerve) up against the world.
If you love fast-paced thrillers with sharp characters and just enough tech to make your pulse quicken, this book is worth your time. Fans of Michael Crichton or early Lee Child would find a lot to enjoy. It’s smart and fun. And if you like the idea of a private eye outwitting a global corporation and out-hacking an evil AI, then buckle up. Stolen delivers.
Pages: 250 | ASIN : B0FG89SC4W
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: action, adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, Paul Chandler, read, reader, reading, Stolen, story, suspense, thriller, writer, writing





