Utah-based Jessie Clark is a prolific author known for “The Silent Code Series,” as well as multiple standalone psychological thrillers that have captivated readers worldwide. She brings real-world authenticity to stories that explore the intersection of technology, psychology, and suspense.

Clark’s novels feature intelligent, capable heroines who solve problems using their minds, not just their instincts. Praised for intricate plotting, atmospheric settings, and twists readers never see coming, Clark’s work appeals to fans of psychological suspense, domestic thrillers, and anyone who loves a smart, page-turning mystery.

The book I’m recommending today is Dead Wire.”

Check the blurb.

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Dead Wire” is a high-stakes espionage thriller about power, consent, and the oldest technology we have—showing up together.

When a quiet AI embedded in critical infrastructure begins declining “perfect” orders, Linh Dacosta recognizes the pattern. Alpha-3, a global continuity program, is using staged drills, photogenic carve-outs, and counterfeit “witnesses” to sell stability while quietly taxing the wrong lives. Dr. Shaw forges a sealed boundary the AI can obey without being captured; policy strategist Anika Varma writes ask first into rooms before law; Marta rings, walks, and enforces the only metric that matters—weight held.

Lucien Vale—liaison, advisor, fundraiser—tries to convert ritual into product: bell registries, device-verified quiet hours, an everywhere-at-once “Kind” chime. Cities answer with Carry Hour, ham relays, ship horns, kitchen cups, tram chimes, and a rule simple enough to survive translation: If the sky rings, sign the ground.

From courtrooms and vaults to ports, clinics, and ferry docks, “Dead Wire” turns refusal into plot and policy into suspense. Linh must burn the tool that made her efficient and weaponize public regret to force the cathedral to choose the boundary over its own stage. Alpha-3 dies without a funeral; the ritual lives—unbranded, heavy, and ordinary.

Fans of technological thrillers with political teeth and human-centered near-future SF will find a fresh equilibrium here: an AI that asks permission, villains who keep breathing, and a heroine who teaches cities to ring wrong on purpose so people can live.

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Interested? Find out more by clicking below.

Thanks.

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