Matthew Glass

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Matthew Glass is the pseudonym of an Australian-born author and doctor who is living and working in Britain. [1]

He is the author of Ultimatum (2009); [2] [3] End Game (2012); and Fishbowl (2015). [4]

His novels are noted for their complex and hyper-realistic depiction of international relations, especially with regard to diplomacy and economics. [5] [6]

Ultimatum is an eco-thriller set in the years 2032 and 2033. [7] [8] [9]

End Game is a geopolitical thriller set in 2018. It was re-released with the name Trigger Point in March 2012.

Fishbowl is a social-networking thriller set in the early 21st century. The social network in Fishbowl is clearly inspired by Facebook but works with AI-generated avatars that can be used by corporations for user-targeted selling. [4]

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References

  1. "Tidal fear: A thriller for our age". The Economist. 4 June 2009.
  2. Athitakis, Mark (26 April 2009). "'Ultimatum' takes look at near future - Intriguing environmental ideas mired in clunky narrative" . Chicago Sun-Times. pp. D9, Books Review via Newsbank.
  3. Millar, Peter (11 July 2009). "Tales of love and war - and heated rhetoric" . The Times (London). p. 12 via Newsbank.
  4. 1 2 Dugdale, John (15 February 2015). "Fatal attraction - Puzzling, spooky or very nasty: death takes many forms in John Dugdale's roundup THRILLERS" . The Sunday Times (London, England). pp. 38 Features via Newsbank.
  5. "End Game by Matthew Glass" Archived 2011-08-10 at the Wayback Machine , Bookgeeks, retrieved Aug 31st 2012
  6. "Review: Trigger Point", Kirkus, retrieved Aug 31st 2012
  7. MCKIE, ROBIN (16 August 2009). "Read all about the end of the world: Once the province of science fiction, ecological catastrophe is becoming a hot subject for mainstream authors, says Robin McKie: Cold Earth Sarah Moss Granta pounds 10.99, pp280 Ultimatum Matthew Glass Atlantic" . The Observer (London, England) via Newsbank.
  8. Steele, Colin (27 March 2010). "Future and present fears" . The Canberra Times (Australia). p. 12 via Newsbank.
  9. Crooks, Ed (25 June 2010). "When the wind blows" . The Financial Times (London, England) via Newsbank.

Bibliography