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James Rollins
View on WikipediaJames Paul Czajkowski (born August 20, 1961), better known by his pen name of James Rollins,[1] is an American veterinarian and writer of action-adventure/thriller, mystery, and techno-thriller novels who gave up his veterinary practice in Sacramento, California to be a full-time author. Rollins' experiences and expertise as an amateur spelunker and a certified scuba diver have provided content for some of his novels, which are often set in underground or underwater locations. Under the pen name James Clemens, he has also published fantasy novels, such as Wit'ch Fire, Wit'ch Storm, Wit'ch War, Wit'ch Gate, Wit'ch Star, Shadowfall (2005), and Hinterland (2006).
Key Information
Biographical sketch
[edit]
James Paul Czajkowski was born in Chicago, Illinois.[1][2] His father worked for the Libby’s canning plant and his mother was a housewife.[3]
He graduated from Parkway West High School in Ballwin, Missouri in 1979.[4] His undergraduate work focused on evolutionary biology and he graduated from the University of Missouri in Columbia in 1985 with a doctorate in veterinary medicine (D. V. M). Soon afterward, he moved to Sacramento, California, where he established his veterinary practice.[1]
In an August 16, 2012 interview, Rollins told SLM's Jeannette Cooperman:
For 20 years my paycheck was coming from my veterinary degree and my writing was my hobby, and I thought it would be really cool to flip that around. Veterinary medicine is much harder. It's a 14-, 16-, 18-hour-a-day job. I owned my own practice, had 24 employees. I couldn't get away, that was the biggest thing. In the 10 years I ran my own practice, I had three weeks of vacation total. I started writing during my lunch hour at the clinic—dogs barking, cats meowing—so now I can write anywhere.
Influences
[edit]Rollins found the authors of the Doc Savage series inspirational as a youth and acquired an extensive collection of the popular 1930s and 1940s pulp magazine stories.[5] Rollins was fascinated by stories of the exploits of Howard Carter and his discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun (King Tut); this true-life tale later inspired Rollins' novel Excavation, in which the main character, archaeologist Henry Conklin, and his nephew Sam discover a lost Inca city in the mountains of the Andean jungle that contains a treasure—and a curse. He also enjoyed L. Frank Baum's Oz series, Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan novels, and C. S. Lewis' Chronicles of Narnia. Additionally, he was inspired by Jules Verne and H. G. Wells,[6] whose works he used as a springboard for creating similar contemporary novels filled with what he refers to as "the three M's of fiction: magic, mayhem, and monsters".[citation needed]
First novel
[edit]Czajkowski sold his first novel, Wit'ch Fire (1999), under the pen name James Clemens, through Terry Brooks' publisher. Brooks had been one of the judges for a writing contest at the Maui Writers' Conference in Maui, Hawaii,[7] in which James had entered a manuscript he had recently completed.[8]
Action-adventure novels
[edit]Subterranean (1999)
[edit]Beneath the ice at the bottom of the Earth is a magnificent subterranean labyrinth, a place of breathtaking wonders—and terrors beyond imagining. A team of specialists, led by archaeologist Ashley Carter, has been hand-picked to explore this secret place and to uncover the riches it holds. But they are not the first to venture here—and those they follow did not return. There are mysteries here older than humanity and revelations that could change the world. But there are also things that should not be disturbed—and a devastating truth that could doom Ashley and the expedition: they are not alone. The caverns are inhabited by an entire subterranean ecosystem of primitive mammals—some intelligent, others savage, all beyond the reach of today's knowledge.
Excavation (2000)
[edit]In Peru, low in the Andes, Dr. Henry Conklin discovers a 500-year-old mummy that should not be there. While deep in the South American jungle, Conklin's nephew, Sam, stumbles upon a remarkable site nestled between two towering peaks, a place hidden from human eyes for thousands of years. Ingenious traps have been laid to ensnare the careless and unsuspecting, and wealth beyond imagining could be the reward for those with the courage to face the terrible unknown. But where this perilous journey ends—in the cold, shrouded heart of a breathtaking necropolis—something else is waiting for Sam Conklin and his exploratory party. A thing created by Man, yet not humanly possible. Something wondrous...something terrifying...a mysterious metal known only as el Sangre del Diablo (or Devil's Blood), known only to the most ancient of Incas and a secret sect of Dominican friars who have already killed and died to protect its secrets.
Deep Fathom (2001)
[edit]Ex-Navy SEAL Jack Kirkland surfaces from an aborted underwater salvage mission to find the Earth burning. Solar flares have triggered a series of gargantuan natural disasters. Earthquakes and hellfire rock the globe. Air Force One has vanished from the skies with America's president on board. Now, with the U.S. on the narrow brink of a nuclear apocalypse, Kirkland must pilot his oceangoing exploration ship, Deep Fathom, on a desperate mission miles below the ocean's surface. There, devastating secrets await him—and a power of an ancient civilization. And it will forever alter a world that's already racing toward its own destruction.
Amazonia (2002)
[edit]Four years ago, all contact with a U.S. medical-scientific expedition in the wilderness of the Amazon basin suddenly ceased; the 30-man team was declared lost and likely dead. Now, one of its members staggers into a Christian mission but dies within hours. He carries identification: he is Gerald Clark, ex-Special Forces. Two years before the expedition, while in Iraq, the CIA operative's left arm was amputated at the shoulder. Photographs of the corpse and fingerprints reveal that the arm has grown back perfectly. Unable to comprehend this inexplicable event, the United States CIA establishes a special team to return to this impenetrable secret world of unforeseen perils and to follow the dead man's trail. On arrival, they enlist Nathan Rand, the son of the lost researchers' team leader. A mysterious plague, that threatens the Earth's entire population, leads back to Gerald Clark. This means the lost expedition's destination, which holds the key to the cure, must be discovered at any cost. But the nightmare that awaits Rand and his team of scientists and seasoned U.S. Army Rangers dwarfs any danger they may have anticipated.
Ice Hunt (2003)
[edit]After an Alaskan game warden rescues a man from a crashed plane and saves him from subsequent attack by foreign soldiers, his ex-wife's piloting skills take them all to the man's intended destination, a US research base on the Arctic ice. The base was set up following the discovery by advanced ice-penetrating sonar of a derelict Russian scientific base buried within a massive iceberg, Ice Station Grendel, where the personnel all died decades earlier. A Russian submarine carrying the son of the station's former commander approaches, ostensibly to retrieve the bodies found by the Americans. Both sides know the station contains vastly important scientific secrets, worth fighting for, but neither side knows quite how the other will fight, or how Grendel itself will complicate matters. In an atmosphere of mistrust and fear, the Alaskans and the scientist overseeing the sonar project have unexpected roles to play, while in the midst of terror, unexpected allies, and betrayals, neither side can afford to lose.
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008)
[edit]In 2008, Random House commissioned Rollins to write the novelization of Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008), the eponymous, American adventure science fiction film. This is the fourth film in the Indiana Jones franchise, created by George Lucas and directed by Steven Spielberg.[9] The novelization won the Scribe Award for Best Adapted Novel (General) in 2009.[10]
Altar of Eden (2009)
[edit]The story starts outside the Baghdad Zoo immediately after the Battle of Baghdad (2003). After being decimated during the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the floodgates have been opened for the smuggling of hundreds of exotic birds, mammals, and reptiles to Western nations. However, this crime hides a deeper secret. Years later, a Louisiana state veterinarian, Lorna Polk, is flown to a wrecked fishing trawler in the Mississippi River delta basin by the United States Customs and Border Protection (CBP). The crew is missing, but the boat holds a live cargo: a caged group of exotic animals. Initially, Polk assumes it is part of a black market smuggling racket. Then she discovers disturbing deformities that make no sense. Also, the animals all share disturbingly heightened intelligence. To uncover the truth about the origin of this strange cargo and the threat it poses, Polk must team up with a man who shares a dark and bloody past with her, now an agent with the CBP.
Sigma Force series
[edit]Sigma Force is a fictional division of the U.S. DARPA program. Their chief operatives combine highly trained military skills with specialized scientific knowledge. Their purpose is to investigate sensitive scientific matters that could pose a threat to the United States. Its functions include counter-terrorism, research, and covert operations. Following the events of the first book, Sandstorm, Sigma Force moves its headquarters into a sub-basement of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.
Book 1: Sandstorm (2004)
[edit]Originally published as a stand-alone novel, Sandstorm became the first book in the Sigma Force series. Commander Painter Crowe attempts to thwart a computer hacker who is putting the United States in danger. Meanwhile, in the British Museum, a private collection is destroyed and the cause cannot be explained. Sigma Force's quest takes them into the Arabian Desert and to a long-buried threat that may bring about the end of the balance of power.
This novel introduces Sigma Force and a mysterious opposing group, the Guild, who appear in several of Rollins' future Sigma Force novels.
Book 2: Map of Bones (2005)
[edit]The magi brought gold, frankincense, and myrrh to the Christ child; their bones may bring destruction to the world if they are allowed to remain in the hands of the thieves who stole them.
Book 3: Black Order (2006)
[edit]Sigma Force team members risk their lives to get to the heart of one of mankind's greatest mysteries: the origins of life itself. This novel features Dr. Lisa Cummings, who was first introduced in Deep Fathom.
Book 4: The Judas Strain (2007)
[edit]Sigma Force members seek to prevent an outbreak that could threaten the entire planet. The outbreak's source and the key to the cure are based on the Hindu temple complex of Angkor Wat. The book also features the apparent death of Dr. Monk Kokkalis and introduction to Sigma Force of Joe Kowalski, who first appeared in Ice Hunt.
Book 5: The Last Oracle (2008)
[edit]Sigma Force battle a group of rogue scientists who have unleashed a bio-engineering project that could bring about the extinction of humankind. An international think-tank of scientists discover a way to bio-engineer autistic children who show savant talents, in the hope of creating a world prophet who can be manipulated to create a new era of global peace on their terms.[11]
Book 6: The Doomsday Key (2009)
[edit]Three murders occur on three different continents; each shares a puzzling, hideous disfigurement, but otherwise no other obvious connection. A clue links the father of one victim, an influential U.S. senator, to a Norwegian corporation. It is revealed that the characters are dealing with an ancient fungal parasite that was discovered and used first by the Egyptians and then, later, by eleventh century Celts and Druids as a bio-weapon.
"The Skeleton Key" (short story, 2011)
[edit]Seichan and a young urban explorer, who has tattooed on his body a map of the Catacombs of Paris, awaken in a Paris hotel after having been kidnapped and drugged, to find deadly electronic collars fastened around their necks. They are tasked to rescue the kidnapper's son who has fallen under the sway of the nefarious leader of an apocalyptic cult. The trail leads them into the dark necropolis beneath Paris. Seichan and her guide must battle the clock, as the cult leader has wired the catacombs with bombs.[12]
This short story includes a sneak peek of the first 70 pages of The Devil Colony, in which a clue unlocked by the skeleton key plays a key role.[12]
Book 7: The Devil Colony (2011)
[edit]SIGMA Force deals with mysterious nanotechnology that may have been mastered by an ancient Native American tribe with input from the Manasseh. The team attempts to track down a lost map, journeying to Fort Knox and the grave of Meriwether Lewis. Rollins refers to secret codes used by Thomas Jefferson and Lewis. The coded message leads Crowe to John Trumbull's painting depicting the presentation of The Declaration of Independence.[13]
"Tracker" (short story, 2012)
[edit]In the medieval heart of Budapest, Captain Tucker Wayne and his war dog, Kane, rescue a mysterious woman fleeing three armed men. They are after the secret she holds, which will unlock a terrible treasure steeped in blood and treachery and tied to a crime going back to the fall of Nazi Germany and a heritage of suffering and pain that reaches out from the past to wreak havoc today. In a final showdown, truths are unearthed and treasures exposed. This short story exclusive includes a sneak peek at the opening chapters of Bloodline, in which further exploits of Tucker and Kane are revealed.[14]
Book 8: Bloodline (2012)
[edit]Sigma Force follows up on information gained in Tracker. The president's daughter is kidnapped by mysterious doctors who seek her baby. President Gant's family is revealed to be a driving force behind the Guild, with their bloodline stretching back for centuries. Jack Kirkland, who first appeared in Deep Fathom, makes an appearance. The novel deals with the quest for immortality, nanotechnology, and micro-engineering.
Book 9: The Eye of God (2013)
[edit]Sigma Force chases down clues related to Attila the Hun and his fateful meeting with Pope Leo I that stopped a Hunnic invasion of Rome. The Vatican receives a package containing the skull of Genghis Khan, along with a book wrapped in his skin, leading the team to Mongolia. All the while, a nearing comet interferes with the imagery of an orbital satellite, causing it to show an image of America's Eastern Seaboard in flaming ruins. It's a race against time for Sigma to stop the apocalypse from occurring.
Book 10: The 6th Extinction (2014)
[edit]Sigma Force fights against a geneticist with a nefarious agenda for handling the extinction of species. The team travels from California, near Yosemite National Park, to the tepuis of the northern Amazon rainforest, and to the ice caves of Antarctica.
"The Midnight Watch" (short story, 2015)
[edit]In the dead of night, a faceless enemy hacks into the Smithsonian Institution's network of servers, but it is only the first strike masking a larger attack. To rescue a biologist trapped in the National Museum of Natural History and discover the true intent behind an assault that grows bolder and bloodier by the minute, Sigma Force must unleash its most headstrong operative, Joe Kowalski.[15]
Book 11: The Bone Labyrinth (2015)
[edit]An amazing discovery is made when an earthquake reveals a subterranean Catholic chapel in the remote mountains of Croatia. An investigative team finds the bones of a Neanderthal woman as well as an elaborate cave painting depicting an immense battle between Neanderthal tribes and monstrous shadowy figures. At the same time, a bloody assault is carried out on a DARPA funded primate research center outside of Atlanta. Sigma Force sends operatives to look into both cases, but does not realize these events may be connected. Plunged into a battle for the future of humanity, the Sigma Force operatives uncover the true source of human intelligence.[16]
"Crash and Burn" (short story, 2016)
[edit]On a transatlantic flight, Seichan and Kowalski must set aside their differences when a mysterious force knocks their airplane out of the sky.[17]
Book 12: The Seventh Plague (2016)
[edit]Two years ago, a famous archaeologist was thought lost in the Sudanese desert during a search for proof of the ten plagues of Moses. His sudden reappearance, and subsequent death, reveal that someone had begun mummifying his body while he was still alive. When the medical team who performed the autopsy falls ill with a strange disease which quickly spreads throughout Cairo, Safia al-Maaz, who originally appeared in Sandstorm, reaches out to Sigma Force for help.[18]
"Ghost Ship" (short story, 2017)
[edit]The discovery of a burned body sprawled on a remote Australian beach shatters the vacation plans of Gray Pierce and Seichan.[19]
Book 13: The Demon Crown (2017)
[edit]An ancient species of deadly parasitic wasp is unleashed upon the islands of Hawaii, where Gray and Seichan are wrapping up their vacation. Teamed with Kowalski and a trio of native Hawaiians, the pair must uncover the perpetrators and bring them to justice. Meanwhile, Kat, Monk and the newly appointed Librarian of Congress, Elena Delgado, follow a trail of clues left across Europe by James Smithson, the mysterious founder of the Smithsonian Institution, to discover a possible way to contain the outbreak.[20]
Book 14: Crucible (2019)
[edit]Gray is thrown into action as he discovers his house ransacked, his lover missing, and Kat unconscious on the kitchen floor. Left without any leads, Gray and his team turn to a brilliant neurologist to get answers from the only witness: the comatose Kat. What Gray learns sets the team on a quest for answers to a mystery that reaches as far back as the Spanish Inquisition and to a reviled medieval text known as the Malleus Maleficarum (The Hammer of Witches). What he uncovers reveals a frightening truth in the present and a future on the brink of annihilation.[21]
Book 15: The Last Odyssey (2020)
[edit]In the frozen tundra of Greenland, a group of modern-day researchers stumble upon a medieval ship buried a half-mile below the ice. The ship's hold contains a collection of artifacts dating back to the Bronze Age. Inside the captain's cabin is found a clockwork gold map embedded with an intricate silver astrolabe. Once activated, the moving map traces the path of Odysseus's famous ship as it sailed away from Troy. But the route detours as the map opens to reveal a fiery river leading to a hidden realm underneath the Mediterranean Sea, the subterranean world of Tartarus. When word of Tartarus spreads, and of the cache of miraculous weapons said to be hidden there, tensions explode in this volatile region. Sigma Force must now go where humans fear to tread. To prevent a tyrant from igniting a global war, they must cross the very gates of Hell.
Book 16: Kingdom of Bones (2022)
[edit]Sigma Force investigates a viral outbreak deep in the heart of the Congo.
Book 17: Tides of Fire (2023)
[edit]Sigma Force must intervene when a research station in the Coral Sea comes under siege during a geological disaster that triggers earthquakes, tsunamis, and volcanic eruptions.
Book 18: Arkangel (2024)
[edit]The execution of a Vatican archivist within the shadow of the Kremlin exposes a conspiracy going back three centuries to the bloody era of the Russian Tsars. Before his murder, he manages to dispatch a coded message, a warning of a terrifying threat, one tied to a secret buried within the Golden Library of Tsars, a vast and treasured archive that had vanished into history.
Adaptations
[edit]A television adaptation of the book series is in development from Absentia creator Matt Cirulnick, Amazon MGM Studios, Leonardo DiCaprio ’s Appian Way Productions, Oakhurst Entertainment and Talaria Media.[22]
Fantasy novels
[edit]The Banned and the Banished series
[edit]The Banned and the Banished is a fantasy novel series that follows a girl named Elena, "who ripens into the heritage of lost power".[23]
The series is a pentalogy. The five books are as follows:
- Wit'ch Fire
- Wit'ch Storm
- Wit'ch War
- Wit'ch Gate
- Wit'ch Star
Godslayer series
[edit]Godslayer Book One: Shadowfall (2005)
[edit]For 4,000 years, the people of the Nine Lands have lived peacefully under the guidance of their hundred gods. When the goddess Meeryn is murdered the peace is shattered, and Tylar de Noche – a defrocked knight who, as sole witness, is now sole suspect – must find the killer and prove himself innocent. Tylar turns to Delia, a priestess and love interest, and to Rogger, a thief wise to the ways of the criminal underworld. Slogging hither and yon for scraps of clues, the three begin to suspect that the supposedly pacific gods are in fact engaged in an ongoing struggle for power and control. The self-absorption of the gods and the apathetic ignorance of the people form stumbling blocks on Tylar's quest.[24]
Godslayer Book Two: Hinterland (2006)
[edit]Failed Shadowknight Tylar witnessed the death of a god, whose blood healed his deformities but branded him a Godslayer and a hunted criminal. In this second volume, Tylar's struggle for the truth is vindicated when he is officially reinstated as a Shadowknight. Yet this is a trap, revealed as Sithryn forces flow from the Ice Eyrie to wage a deadly siege, trapping Tylar and his friends. But even Tylar's skill and magic cannot save the Citadel of Tashijan, ancient Shadowknight headquarters, for something foul lies at the heart of their Order. The Cabal has infiltrated the inner council and Tylar and his allies must flee for now there can be no refuge from evil.
Other Godslayer Books
[edit]On the FAQ section of his website, Rollins announces plans for further novels: "There are more plans for the Godslayer books. The working title for Book Three is God-Sword. Besides continuing the storyline, it will discover much more about Laurelle, her past, and her perilous journey to a god hidden in the heart of a volcano. God-Sword will finish the first trilogy. And there may be a second trilogy with many of the same characters."[25]
On February 10, 2015, Rollins wrote in an AMA ("Ask Me Anything"[26]) on Reddit.com: "Third book is done; fourth is midway. Once the fifth is done, the entire series is slated for publication, each book coming out 6 months apart, starting with a re-release of the first two."[27]
MoonFall Saga
[edit]The Starless Crown (2022)
[edit]The Cradle of Ice (2023)
[edit]Collaboration with Rebecca Cantrell
[edit]Rollins collaborated with the mystery writer Rebecca Cantrell to write several works in the Order of the Sanguines series (comprising a trilogy published in print and digital formats, plus a number of short fiction e-books): City of Screams (2012), a novella set in Afghanistan;[28] The Blood Gospel (2013);[29] Blood Brothers (2013), an e-short;[30] Innocent Blood (2013);[31] and Blood Infernal (2015).[32]
Collaboration with Grant Blackwood
[edit]Rollins collaborated with the thriller writer Grant Blackwood to write multiple works in the Tucker Wayne series of military thriller novels: The Kill Switch (2014)[33] and War Hawk (2015).[34] Tucker Wayne also appears in the SIGMA Force series in "Tracker".
Bibliography
[edit]As James Rollins
[edit]Stand-alone action-adventure novels
[edit]- Subterranean (1999)
- Excavation (2000)
- Deep Fathom (2001)
- Amazonia (2002)
- Ice Hunt (2003)
- Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008) (novelization)
- Altar of Eden (2009)
Sigma Force series
[edit]- 1. Sandstorm (2004)
- 2. Map of Bones (2005)
- 3. Black Order (2006)
- 3.5 Kowalski's in Love (2006) [short story]
- 4. The Judas Strain (2007)
- 5. The Last Oracle (2008)
- 6. The Doomsday Key (2009)
- 6.5 The Skeleton Key (2011) [short story]
- 7. The Devil Colony (2011)
- 7.5 Tracker (2012) [short story]
- 8. Bloodline (2012)
- 9. The Eye of God (2013)
- 9.5 The Devil's Bones: Cotton Malone vs. Grey Pierce (2014) (with Steve Berry) [short story]
- 10. The 6th Extinction (2014)
- 10.5 The Midnight Watch (2015) [short story]
- 11. The Bone Labyrinth (2015)
- 11.5 Crash and Burn (2016) [short story]
- 12. The Seventh Plague (2016)
- 12.5 Ghost Ship (2017) [short story]
- 13. The Demon Crown (2017)
- 14. Crucible (2019)
- 15. The Last Odyssey (2020)
- 16. Kingdom of Bones (2022)
- 17. Tides of Fire (2023)
- 18. Arkangel (2024)
Tucker Wayne Series (with Grant Blackwood)
[edit]The Order of the Sanguines Trilogy (with Rebecca Cantrell)
[edit]- 0.5 City of Screams (2012) [short story]
- 1. The Blood Gospel (2013)
- 1.5 Blood Brothers (2013) [short story]
- 2. Innocent Blood (2013)
- 3. Blood Infernal (2015)
MoonFall series
[edit]- The Starless Crown (2022)
- The Cradle of Ice (2023)
- A Dragon of Black Glass (2025)
Kids & Adult series
[edit]- Jake Ransom and the Skull King's Shadow (2009)
- Jake Ransom and the Howling Sphinx (2011)
Anthologies
[edit]- Thriller: Stories to Keep You Up All Night (2006)
- "Kowalski's In Love"
- Warriors (2010)
- "The Pit"
- Fear (2010)
- "Tagger"
- Thrillers: 100 Must Reads (2010)
- "Jack Finney's Invasion of the Body Snatchers"[35]
- FaceOff (2014)
- "The Devil's Bones"
As James Clemens
[edit]The Banned and the Banished series
[edit]- Wit'ch Fire (1998)
- Wit'ch Storm (1999)
- Wit'ch War (2000)
- Wit'ch Gate (2001)
- Wit'ch Star (2002)
The Godslayer series
[edit]- Shadowfall (2005)
- Hinterland (2006)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f "Licensee entry: James Paul Czajkowski". California Veterinary Medical Board. Archived from the original on 2019-11-08. Retrieved 2011-12-07.
- ^ Cooperman, Jeannette (August 16, 2012). "Thriller: A Q&A with Author James Rollins". SLM. Archived from the original on September 8, 2015. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
- ^ "An Evening with James Rollins", National Writers Series, public interview, Wednesday, January 27, 2016, City Opera House, Traverse City, Michigan, with Guest Host Michael Dow.
- ^ Jaskowiak, Nell, "James Czajkowski makes a career of writing", Parkway West Pathfinder, September 5, 2017 issue.
- ^ "About - James Rollins". James Rollins. Archived from the original on 2016-01-06. Retrieved 2016-01-13.
- ^ "The Kill Switch: A Talk With James Rollins". The Huffington Post. 14 May 2014. Archived from the original on 2016-07-24. Retrieved 2016-01-13.
- ^ "Maui Writers' Conference (Formerly Maui Writers Foundation)". Hawai'i Writers Foundation. Archived from the original on 2016-01-09. Retrieved July 9, 2014.
- ^ "Claire E. White, 'A Conversation With James Clemens', The Internet Writing Journal, October 2000". Archived from the original on 2019-02-20. Retrieved 2019-02-19.
- ^ James Rollins (2008). Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. Del Rey Books. ISBN 978-0-345-50128-8. Archived from the original on 2008-12-16. Retrieved 2013-01-05.
- ^ "The Third Annual Scribe Awards (2009)". Retrieved July 28, 2025.
- ^ "The Last Oracle: A Sigma Force Novel". Archived from the original on 2017-08-08. Retrieved 2017-08-08.
- ^ a b "Editor's Description of The Skeleton Key". Goodreads. 2011. ASIN B0050CNY10. Archived from the original on 2021-09-12. Retrieved 2014-09-30.
- ^ Reveal, Judith Reveal (June 17, 2011). "Review of The Devil Colony: A Sigma Force Novel". New York Journal of Books. Archived from the original on September 20, 2015. Retrieved October 16, 2014.
- ^ Publisher Summary of Tracker: A Short Story Exclusive. William Morrow. 2012. ISBN 9780062233929. Archived from the original on 2014-11-19. Retrieved 2014-09-30 – via Goodreads.
- ^ "Midnight Watch scheduled release". JamesRollins.com. Archived from the original on 2015-11-01. Retrieved 2015-11-02.
- ^ Rollins, James (June 30, 2015). The Bone Labyrinth: A Sigma Force Novel. HarperCollins. ISBN 9780062381644. Archived from the original on November 1, 2014. Retrieved November 25, 2014.
- ^ "Crash and Burn". JamesRollins.com. Archived from the original on 2018-09-30. Retrieved 2018-09-30.
- ^ Rollins, James (December 13, 2016). The Seventh Plague: A Sigma Force Novel. HarperCollins. ISBN 9780062673565. Archived from the original on January 4, 2017. Retrieved January 3, 2017.
- ^ "Ghost Ship: A Short Story Exclusive". James Rollins. Retrieved 2022-04-21.
- ^ Rollins, James (December 5, 2017). The Demon Crown: A Sigma Force Novel. Archived from the original on September 12, 2021. Retrieved June 16, 2017.
- ^ Rollins, James (2018). The Hammer of Witches (Sigma Force #14). HarperCollins. Archived from the original on 2018-03-13. Retrieved 2018-03-13.
- ^ Quoted text. Cf. JamesRollins.com using part of author's synopsis.
- ^ Clemens, James (2002–2003). The Banned and the Banished Saga. Orbit.
- ^ Rollins, James (2005). Shadowfall (The Godslayer Chronicles, Book 1). ISBN 0451459946.
- ^ "FAQ". JamesRollins.com. Archived from the original on 2015-02-11. Retrieved 2015-02-11.
- ^ "Webtrends: What Is a Reddit AMA?". About.com. Archived from the original on 2016-03-05. Retrieved 2016-02-28.
- ^ "AMA: I'm James Rollins, author of the Sigma series (think "scientists with guns") and now a trilogy centered on a secret order in the Vatican". Reddit. February 10, 2015. Archived from the original on August 17, 2015. Retrieved February 12, 2015.
- ^ Rollins, James; Cantrell, Rebecca (2012). City of Screams: A Short Story Exclusive William Morrow. HarperCollins. ASIN B0095IATR2.
- ^ Rollins, James; Cantrell, Rebecca (2013). The Blood Gospel (Reprint ed.). William Morrow. ASIN B0089LOGDE.
- ^ Rollins, James; Cantrell, Rebecca (2013). Blood Brothers. William Morrow Impulse. ASIN B00EXOFE4Q.
- ^ Rollins, James; Cantrell, Rebecca (2013). Innocent Blood (First ed.). William Morrow. ISBN 978-0061991066.
- ^ Rollins, James; Cantrell, Rebecca (2015). Blood Infernal. William Morrow. ISBN 978-0062343260.
- ^ a b Rollins, James (April 8, 2014). War Hawk (Tucker Wayne #1). William Morrow. ISBN 978-1409154433. Archived from the original on September 12, 2021. Retrieved September 1, 2017.
- ^ a b Rollins, James (April 7, 2015). War Hawk (Tucker Wayne #2). William Morrow. ISBN 9780062135278.
- ^ "Jack Finney's Invasion of the Body Snatchers" in David Morrell & Hank Wagner (eds) Thrillers: 100 Must Reads (2010).
External links
[edit]- James Clemens at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- "James Clemens' official website". JamesClemens.com.
- "James Rollins' official website". JamesRollins.com.
- Modern Signed Books BlogTalkRadio interview about Demon Crown
James Rollins
View on GrokipediaEarly life and education
Childhood and family background
James Paul Czajkowski, who later adopted the pen name James Rollins, was born on August 20, 1961, in Chicago, Illinois.[1] He was raised in a Roman Catholic family in the suburban area of Ballwin, Missouri, where he developed an early fascination with science, animals, and medicine. He grew up as the eldest in a family of seven children, with his father working at a Libby’s canning plant and his mother as a housewife.[4] By the third grade, Czajkowski knew he wanted to become a veterinarian, driven by his love for these subjects, which shaped his academic and career path.[5] Growing up with several younger siblings, Czajkowski often served as the older brother who orchestrated elaborate pranks, using his storytelling skills to spin tall tales that captivated and tricked his family members.[2] These childhood antics honed his narrative abilities, foreshadowing his future as a writer, though his parents remained skeptical about pursuing writing as a profession, given the family's lack of literary background.[5] During his youth, he immersed himself in adventure literature, drawing inspiration from authors like Jules Verne, H.G. Wells, and pulp heroes such as Doc Savage, The Shadow, and The Avenger, which fueled his imagination and interest in scientific wonders.[2] As a quiet introvert in high school at Parkway West Senior High in Ballwin, Czajkowski maintained a close circle of friends while exploring his passions for history, science, and creative writing, graduating in 1979.[5] This formative period in Missouri laid the groundwork for his dual interests in veterinary science and fiction, blending factual inquiry with imaginative narratives.[4]Academic pursuits and veterinary training
Rollins, born James Paul Czajkowski in Chicago, Illinois, developed an early interest in science and the natural world, influenced by his family's moves across the Midwest. After relocating to the St. Louis area, he attended Parkway South Junior High School and graduated from Parkway West High School in Ballwin, Missouri, in 1979, where he was known as a quiet, introverted student with a budding passion for reading and exploration.[4][5] Pursuing his scientific inclinations, Rollins enrolled at the University of Missouri in Columbia, where he completed undergraduate studies focused on evolutionary biology. This foundation in biology sparked his fascination with archaeology, ancient history, and the intersections of science and human evolution, themes that would later permeate his writing. His academic path reflected a commitment to understanding life's complexities through a biological lens, setting the stage for advanced training in animal health.[1] In 1985, Rollins earned a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine (D.V.M.) from the University of Missouri's College of Veterinary Medicine,[6] marking the culmination of his formal veterinary training. The rigorous program equipped him with expertise in animal anatomy, pathology, and clinical practice, which he applied directly after graduation by establishing a successful veterinary clinic in Sacramento, California. This hands-on experience in diagnosing and treating diverse species honed his attention to scientific detail and problem-solving skills.[2][4]Professional background
Career as a veterinarian
James Rollins earned his Doctorate in Veterinary Medicine (D.V.M.) from the University of Missouri–Columbia in 1985.[2][4] Following graduation, he relocated to Sacramento, California, where he established and operated a successful private veterinary clinic.[3] His practice focused on general veterinary care for companion animals, reflecting his commitment to animal health in a bustling urban setting.[1] Rollins managed the clinic for approximately 15 years, during which it grew to employ 24 staff members, demanding 60- to 70-hour workweeks.[4][7] The intensive nature of the work, including emergency care and business operations, shaped his early professional life but eventually led him to pursue writing as a full-time career around 2000, after the publication of his debut novel Subterranean in 1999.[8] Despite this transition, Rollins has maintained involvement in veterinary causes, volunteering at local animal shelters to perform procedures such as spaying and neutering.[2][1]Transition to writing
After establishing his veterinary practice in Sacramento following his graduation from the University of Missouri's College of Veterinary Medicine in 1985, James Rollins initially set aside his youthful aspirations of writing to focus on his demanding career, which often involved 60-hour workweeks managing a clinic with multiple employees.[8] By the mid-1990s, however, Rollins rediscovered his passion for storytelling as an escape from the rigors of veterinary medicine; around age 35, he joined a local writing group in Sacramento and began crafting novels inspired by adventure genres, completing his debut thriller, Subterranean, which was published in 1999 by HarperCollins.[9] This marked the start of his dual life, balancing patient care with late-night writing sessions. The success of Subterranean and his follow-up thriller Excavation (2000) provided the financial and professional momentum for Rollins to begin transitioning away from full-time veterinary work.[10] He sold his practice around 2000 but continued as an employed veterinarian at the facility to maintain stability while his writing output increased, including fantasy novels under the pseudonym James Clemens, such as Wit'ch Fire (1998).[11] Over the next year, Rollins gradually reduced his hours—from full-time to part-time, then to one day a week—allowing him to refine his craft and meet publisher demands.[7] By January 2001, with several books under his belt and royalties providing a viable income, Rollins fully severed ties with the clinic, flipping his priorities: writing became his primary profession, while occasional veterinary volunteering evolved into a hobby that informed his animal-centric plot elements.[4] This shift enabled him to produce at a prolific pace, releasing Deep Fathom later that year and launching the long-running Sigma Force series with Sandstorm in 2004, cementing his status as a bestselling author.[12]Literary style and influences
Key inspirations from adventure fiction
James Rollins' writing draws heavily from the pulp adventure fiction of the early 20th century, particularly series like Doc Savage, which he read extensively—claiming to have consumed all 182 novels—as a child. These stories of "scientific adventures" featuring heroic protagonists battling exotic threats profoundly shaped his approach to blending high-stakes action with speculative science, a hallmark of his thrillers. Rollins has described his work as an unconscious effort to revive the spirit of these dime novels, recasting them in modern settings with rigorous scientific grounding to appeal to contemporary readers.[10] Among classic adventure authors, Rollins cites Jules Verne, H.G. Wells, and H. Rider Haggard as pivotal influences, whose exploratory tales of hidden worlds and lost civilizations inspired his own narratives of subterranean expeditions and ancient mysteries. For instance, his debut novel Subterranean (1999) directly echoes Verne's Journey to the Center of the Earth (1864) in its premise of a team descending into uncharted underground realms fraught with peril and discovery. This lineage is evident in Rollins' recurring use of pseudoscientific wonders and perilous quests, transforming historical myths into pulse-pounding plots.[10] More contemporary inspirations include Michael Crichton and Clive Cussler, whose techno-thrillers Rollins devoured growing up and credits with guiding his genre choice. Crichton's fusion of cutting-edge science and ethical dilemmas in works like Jurassic Park (1990) influenced Rollins' emphasis on plausible yet thrilling scientific concepts, such as nanotechnology or genetic anomalies, integrated into global conspiracies. Similarly, Cussler's adventure-driven Dirk Pitt series modeled Rollins' fast-paced, treasure-hunting escapades, prompting him to craft stories of elite teams unraveling historical enigmas amid explosive action.[13][10][14]Recurring themes in his works
James Rollins' novels frequently explore the human implications of technological advancement, portraying it not merely as mechanical progress but as a force intertwined with ethical, emotional, and societal consequences. In interviews, Rollins has emphasized that "one of the recurring themes in my novels is the exploration of how advancing technology affects us," highlighting the personal and moral dimensions beyond "cogs and wheels." This theme permeates his Sigma Force series, where cutting-edge innovations like quantum computing and genetic engineering often drive plots involving global threats, as seen in The Demon Crown, where ancient artifacts intersect with modern biotech to challenge humanity's future.[15] A central motif across Rollins' thrillers is the reconciliation of science and religion, seeking common ground between empirical inquiry and spiritual belief. He has noted that in many of his novels, he seeks that common ground between faith and the scientific method, between science and religion, blending faith and the scientific method to resolve conflicts. This is evident in works like The Bone Labyrinth, which delves into human evolution through archaeological discoveries that bridge Darwinian theory with ancient religious texts, and Sandstorm, where biblical prophecies align with nuclear physics to avert apocalypse. Such integrations underscore Rollins' interest in how historical and sacred narratives can inform modern scientific dilemmas.[12][16] History and ancient mysteries recur as foundational elements, often serving as catalysts for contemporary crises in Rollins' adventure thrillers. His narratives weave real historical events and artifacts with speculative science, creating high-stakes quests that reveal hidden truths about civilization's origins. For instance, in Eye of God, telescopic observations of cosmic phenomena tie into religious prophecies and medieval lore, redefining reality through this fusion. This approach not only propels action but also examines humanity's enduring quest for knowledge amid peril.[17] In his fantasy works under the pseudonym James Clemens, recurring themes shift toward epic struggles against darkness, emphasizing sacrifice, prophecy, and the corrupting influence of power. The Banned and the Banished series centers on a prophesied wit'ch whose forbidden magic sparks a rebellion against an oppressive empire, exploring themes of heritage and redemption through relentless pursuit and moral ambiguity. Similarly, the Godslayer Chronicles feature immortal gods walking among mortals in a "god-punk" world, probing the tensions between divine authority and human agency, as gods manipulate societies through myth and prophecy. These elements evoke classic fantasy tropes but innovate with intricate magic systems like "God's Grace," which ties power to faith and frailty.[18][19] Rollins' recent fantasy endeavors, such as the Moonfall Saga, continue these patterns while incorporating survival and betrayal in a post-apocalyptic world suspended between moon and earth. Themes of ambition and alliance-building drive the narrative, as diverse characters unite to unearth ancient secrets threatening their fragile existence, blending adventure with reflections on resilience and hidden histories. Overall, whether in thrillers or fantasy, Rollins consistently interrogates the boundaries between innovation and tradition, using high-concept premises to illuminate universal human concerns.[20]Fantasy works as James Clemens
The Banned and the Banished series
The Banned and the Banished is a five-volume epic fantasy series authored by James Clemens, the pseudonym used by James Rollins for his fantasy works. Published by Del Rey Books, an imprint of Random House, between 1998 and 2002, the series unfolds in the fictional continent of Alasea, a land long oppressed during a "black age" following the return of ancient evils. It centers on the resurgence of forbidden magicks known as the Banned and the Banished, which were sealed away centuries earlier by three mages in a desperate stand to preserve hope against encroaching darkness. The narrative blends high fantasy elements with adventure, emphasizing prophecy, racial alliances, and the personal toll of wielding prohibited powers.[18] At the heart of the story is Elena, a young peasant girl from a remote winterland village, who bears the "taint" of wit'ch blood—a mark on her palm signifying her lineage tied to ancient, outlawed sorcery. On the anniversary of the mages' historic sacrifice, the Dark Lord unleashes his soulless minions, the skal'tum, to conquer Alasea. Prophesied as a savior, Elena must flee her home, learn to control her volatile magick through a blood diary artifact, and rally disparate races including humans, elves, dwarves, and mer folk against the threat. Her journey involves moral conflicts over the corrupting nature of wit'ch power, which draws strength from blood and emotion, and requires alliances with companions like the swordsman Er'ril and the scholar Nee'lahn. The series portrays Elena's transformation from vulnerability to leadership, highlighting themes of destiny's burden and the unity needed to combat systemic evil.[21][22] The volumes progress as interconnected scrolls chronicling Elena's escalating quest, each advancing the war against the Dark Lord's forces while deepening the world's lore of lost cities, elemental magicks, and hidden prophecies:- Wit'ch Fire (1998): Introduces Elena's discovery of her powers and initial flight southward to seek training in banned magicks amid the Dark Lord's invasion.[21]
- Wit'ch Storm (1999): Elena and her allies venture to the fabled city of A'loa Glen to unlock the Blood Diary's secrets, facing internal betrayals and escalating skal'tum assaults.
- Wit'ch War (2000): The group infiltrates enemy territories, forging uneasy pacts with Alasea's fractured peoples as the Dark Lord's influence spreads corruption.[23]
- Wit'ch Gate (2001): Revelations about the wit'ch bloodline lead to a desperate assault on a fortified gate, testing loyalties and unleashing greater magickal forces.[23]
- Wit'ch Star (2002): The saga culminates in a world-shattering confrontation where Elena confronts the unmasked Dark Lord, forcing ultimate sacrifices to restore Alasea's balance.
The Godslayer series
The Godslayer Chronicles is a fantasy series written by James Clemens, the pseudonym of author James Rollins, set in the world of Myrillia where one hundred immortal gods descended from the heavens four millennia ago to impose order on a chaotic realm. Out of this turmoil, the gods created the Nine Lands, a structured society blessed by their divine Graces—manifestations of elemental magic that sustain life and enforce a rigid caste system among humans, while the surrounding Hinterlands remain a cursed, desolate wasteland teeming with dark forces and rogue deities. The series, envisioned as a trilogy, explores themes of divinity, corruption, and rebellion against god-imposed hierarchies, blending high fantasy with elements of political intrigue and mythic lore. Only the first two volumes were published by Roc Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House, leaving the narrative unresolved.[25][26][27] The inaugural novel, Shadowfall, released in July 2005, introduces protagonist Tylar de Noche, a disgraced Shadowknight—a warrior sworn to protect the gods—who becomes entangled in a divine crisis that threatens the fragile balance of Myrillia. As accusations of blasphemy and murder swirl amid the Nine Lands' opulent yet stratified society, Tylar's journey unveils deeper mysteries about the gods' true nature and the origins of the Graces that bind humanity. The book establishes the series' intricate world-building, including the interplay between light and shadow magics, the ethical dilemmas of god-worship, and the societal divides enforced by divine rule, all while propelling a fast-paced adventure across varied landscapes from sacred temples to shadowed frontiers. Critics noted its ambitious scope and vivid depiction of a theocratic world, though some highlighted familiar fantasy tropes in its quest narrative.[27] The sequel, Hinterland, published in November 2006, continues Tylar's quest as he ventures into the forbidden Hinterlands to confront an emerging threat: a cabal wielding corrupted Graces that could unravel the gods' dominion over the Nine Lands. Accompanied by a diverse band of allies, including exiles and skeptics of divine authority, Tylar uncovers artifacts and ancient secrets that challenge the foundational myths of Myrillia, intensifying the series' exploration of faith versus heresy and the perils of unchecked power among immortals. The novel expands on the lore of rogue gods and dark magics, emphasizing the Hinterlands as a chaotic mirror to the ordered Nine Lands, and builds tension through escalating conflicts that blend personal redemption with world-altering stakes. Like its predecessor, it received praise for its dynamic action and layered mythology but lamented the cliffhanger ending without a announced third installment.[28][29][30] Despite fan anticipation for a concluding volume, no further books in the Godslayer Chronicles have been released as of 2025, with Rollins focusing primarily on his thriller works under his primary pseudonym. The series stands as a notable entry in Clemens' fantasy oeuvre, distinguished by its "god-punk" aesthetic—portraying immortals as flawed rulers in a lived-in theocracy—and its emphasis on how divine intervention shapes human society, influencing later works in the genre that grapple with deified authority.[31][19]Thriller works as James Rollins
Standalone action-adventure novels
James Rollins's standalone action-adventure novels, published primarily in the early 2000s, represent his initial forays into high-stakes thrillers blending scientific discovery, ancient mysteries, and perilous expeditions. These works, distinct from his later interconnected series, showcase Rollins's signature style of fast-paced narratives rooted in real-world science and historical intrigue, often drawing on his background as a veterinarian to incorporate biological and environmental elements. They established his reputation for immersive, globe-spanning adventures that prefigure the elaborate plots of his Sigma Force series.[32] Subterranean (1999) follows a team of elite scientists and explorers venturing beneath Antarctica's ice to investigate a newly discovered subterranean world, only to encounter breathtaking wonders and unimaginable terrors, including advanced prehistoric creatures. The novel weaves themes of evolutionary biology and human hubris in extreme environments, marking Rollins's debut as a thriller author.[33] In Excavation (2000), archaeologist Sam Conklin uncovers a buried Inca tomb in the Peruvian Andes, revealing a 500-year-old mummy and a labyrinth of ancient secrets tied to lost gold and a deadly plague. The story alternates between modern digs and 16th-century flashbacks, highlighting Rollins's use of historical archaeology to drive contemporary suspense.[34] Deep Fathom (2001) centers on ex-Navy SEAL Jack Kirkland, who emerges from a Pacific salvage mission amid global chaos triggered by solar flares and massive natural disasters, leading to the discovery of an ancient underwater civilization. The plot explores geophysical cataclysms and lost technologies, emphasizing Rollins's fascination with oceanic mysteries and apocalyptic threats.[35] Amazonia (2002) recounts the fate of a vanished scientific expedition in the Brazilian rainforest, as botanist Nathan Rand leads a rescue team into a deadly jungle harboring mutated flora, tribal guardians, and corporate exploitation. Drawing on ecological horrors and indigenous lore, the novel critiques environmental destruction while delivering pulse-pounding survival action.[36] Ice Hunt (2003) unfolds in the Arctic, where oceanographer Amanda Reynolds and a U.S. Navy team investigate an abandoned Soviet ice station carved into a massive drifting berg, uncovering WWII-era experiments with superhuman predators and geopolitical rivalries. The thriller combines cryogenic science, military espionage, and monstrous revelations in a frozen wasteland.[37] The 2008 novelization Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull adapts the film, pitting archaeologist Indiana Jones against Soviet agents in a 1950s quest for a telepathic alien artifact hidden in South American ruins, blending pulp adventure with Cold War intrigue and extraterrestrial elements. Rollins's adaptation expands on the screenplay's action sequences while preserving the franchise's whip-cracking heroism.[38] Altar of Eden (2009), Rollins's return to standalones after launching his series, follows Louisiana veterinarian Lorna Polk as she probes a shipwrecked trawler smuggling exotic animals from Iraq's looted Baghdad Zoo, unraveling a black-market operation involving genetically enhanced creatures and biblical prophecies. The narrative fuses veterinary science, wildlife trafficking, and ethical dilemmas in genetic engineering.[32] These novels collectively sold millions of copies and garnered praise for their meticulous research and cinematic scope, influencing Rollins's evolution toward ensemble-driven series while standing as self-contained epics of exploration and peril.[37]Sigma Force series
The Sigma Force series is a techno-thriller franchise by James Rollins, centering on the covert operations of Sigma Force, a top-secret branch of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) in collaboration with the Smithsonian Institution. This elite unit comprises former soldiers trained as scientists, deployed to neutralize global threats arising from the intersection of advanced technology, historical enigmas, and biological or environmental crises. The narratives often explore pseudoscientific concepts grounded in real-world science, weaving in elements of archaeology, genetics, and geopolitics to drive fast-paced plots that span continents and eras.[39] Introduced in the 2004 novel Sandstorm, the series establishes Sigma Force's mandate to safeguard national security amid extraordinary discoveries, such as anomalous energy sources or ancient artifacts with modern implications. Recurring protagonist Commander Gray Pierce, a former U.S. Army Ranger with expertise in biology and physics, leads field teams under the direction of Painter Crowe, Sigma's shrewd and tactical director. Other key figures include Monk Kokkalis, a physician and operative; Lisa Cummings, a naval medic; and Joe Kowalski, a burly demolitions specialist whose humor provides levity amid the tension. The enigmatic Seichan, initially an antagonist from the shadowy Guild organization, evolves into a pivotal ally across multiple installments, adding layers of intrigue and moral ambiguity.[40][41] The series emphasizes themes of scientific hubris and the perils of resurrecting lost knowledge, with each novel typically featuring a standalone threat—ranging from plague-like viruses to quantum anomalies—while advancing overarching arcs involving the Guild's machinations. Rollins incorporates meticulous research into historical events and cutting-edge innovations, such as nanotechnology or deep-sea volcanism, to heighten authenticity and suspense. Short stories like "Kowalski's in Love" (2007) and "Tracker" (2012) expand the universe by focusing on peripheral characters and missions.[42][43]| Book Title | Publication Year | Brief Premise |
|---|---|---|
| Sandstorm | 2004 | A deadly sandstorm in the Arabian desert uncovers a mysterious energy source tied to ancient legends, forcing Sigma to race against a cult seeking world-altering power. |
| Map of Bones | 2005 | Thieves target gold relics from medieval churches, revealing a plot to engineer a new world order using alchemical secrets.[40] |
| Black Order | 2006 | A Copenhagen bookstore fire leads to a hunt for Nazi-era experiments in quantum physics and human augmentation.[41] |
| The Judas Strain | 2007 | A biblical plague resurfaces from the ocean depths, threatening global devastation as Sigma uncovers its origins in historical voyages.[42] |
| The Last Oracle | 2008 | Children with prophetic abilities are kidnapped, linking ancient Greek oracles to modern neuroscientific manipulation. |
| The Doomsday Key | 2009 | A Celtic artifact points to a doomsday code hidden in Ireland's landscapes, involving genetic engineering and viral outbreaks. |
| The Devil Colony | 2011 | Native American mummies in the Rockies reveal colonial secrets and a bioweapon derived from lost Founding Fathers' experiments. |
| Bloodline | 2012 | The U.S. president's daughter is captured in Africa, exposing a bloodline-based eugenics plot with ties to ancient royalty.[44] |
| The Eye of God | 2013 | A satellite detects a massive threat from space, tracing back to Genghis Khan's empire and particle physics weaponry. |
| The Bone Labyrinth | 2015 | Excavations in Spain link Neanderthal DNA to human evolution experiments and a labyrinthine maze of prehistoric traps. |
| The Seventh Plague | 2016 | A mummy's curse manifests as a real pathogen from ancient Egypt, amplified by climate change and bioterrorism. |
| The Demon Crown | 2017 | An island ecosystem is overrun by invasive ants carrying a mind-altering toxin, rooted in Incan biological warfare.[45] |
| Crucible | 2019 | Quantum computing breakthroughs enable reality-warping simulations, drawing on alchemical texts and AI ethics dilemmas. |
| The Last Odyssey | 2020 | A submersible discovers an Antarctic anomaly tied to Homer's Odyssey and a prehistoric civilization's cataclysmic technology.[46] |
| Kingdom of Bones | 2022 | A phenomenon in the Congo causes rapid evolution, turning animals and plants predatory and humans catatonic, linked to a cursed African jungle site threatening global catastrophe. |
| Tides of Fire | 2023 | Volcanic eruptions in the Pacific unleash mythical beasts and geothermal weapons, inspired by Southeast Asian folklore.[43] |
| Arkangel | 2024 | The execution of a Vatican archivist near the Kremlin uncovers a 300-year-old Russian conspiracy linked to the Tsars' lost Golden Library and an Arctic threat that could ignite global war.[47] |
Tucker Wayne series
The Tucker Wayne series is a military thriller duology co-authored by James Rollins and Grant Blackwood, functioning as a spin-off from Rollins' Sigma Force novels. Published by William Morrow, the series centers on high-stakes covert operations blending action, science, and the dynamics of human-canine partnerships.[49][50] The protagonist, Captain Tucker Wayne, is a former U.S. Army Ranger who left the service after traumatic experiences in Afghanistan, including the loss of his previous war dog. He is partnered with Kane, a Belgian Malinois military working dog trained to comprehend over 1,000 verbal and visual commands, functioning as an equal operative in missions. Their bond is portrayed as deeply intuitive, with Kane's abilities drawing from real-world K-9 training techniques. Tucker and Kane first appeared in the e-book short story "Tracker" (2012), a prequel where they rescue a woman in Budapest amid a Nazi treasure hunt tied to World War II secrets, setting up their integration into the Sigma Force universe. They subsequently aid Sigma operatives in the novel Bloodline (2012), establishing their role as specialized assets for sensitive extractions.[51][49][44] The Kill Switch, the series opener released on May 13, 2014, recruits Tucker and Kane for Sigma Force to extract Dr. Kira Gait from Siberia. The scientist has isolated an ancient microbe capable of resurrecting extinct life forms but also weaponized as a bioplague targeting the U.S. food supply. Betrayed en route, the duo pursues leads through Russia's frozen tundra, war-torn Ukraine, and Namibia's deserts, confronting corporate mercenaries and a cult-like group exploiting the microbe's origins in primordial biology. The narrative incorporates veterinary science and paleontology, highlighting Rollins' background as a veterinarian.[52][53] War Hawk, published April 19, 2016, reunites Tucker with former colleague Dr. Jane Sabatello, who flees assassins with her son after uncovering a Silicon Valley CEO's plot. The conspiracy weaponizes unpublished theories from Alan Turing to create self-evolving drone swarms for autonomous warfare, potentially destabilizing global democracies. Tucker assembles a ragtag team, including FBI agents and hackers, to infiltrate the operation across U.S. cities and remote facilities, while grappling with moral injury from past missions. The book emphasizes ethical dilemmas in AI development and reinforces the series' focus on Kane's tactical prowess in urban combat.[54][55][49] As of November 2025, no additional installments have been released, though Tucker and Kane make cameo appearances in later Sigma Force books, underscoring their enduring ties to the parent series. The duology has been praised for its realistic depiction of military working dogs and fast-paced plotting, appealing to fans of techno-thrillers.[56][57]Jake Ransom series
The Jake Ransom series is a middle-grade fantasy adventure duology written by James Rollins under his thriller pseudonym, targeting readers aged 8–12 with fast-paced stories blending time travel, prehistoric creatures, and ancient mythologies. Published by HarperCollins, the series follows orphaned siblings Jake and Kady Ransom as they navigate interdimensional perils to rescue their missing archaeologist parents and thwart a malevolent overlord.[58] The inaugural novel, Jake Ransom and the Skull King's Shadow (2009), opens three years after the Ransom parents' disappearance during a dig in the Yucatán Peninsula. Jake, a 12-year-old inventor with a passion for gadgets, and his 15-year-old sister Kady, a budding musician, receive a cryptic package at home containing their father's field journal and a teardrop-shaped crystal. At a British Museum exhibit showcasing their parents' Mayan research, the crystal activates, pulling the siblings through a portal to Calypsos—a hidden pocket dimension resembling a prehistoric Earth, inhabited by dinosaurs, alchemical forges, and disparate ancient groups like Roman legionaries, Viking berserkers, and a Mayan-like civilization called the Ur. There, they befriend local allies, including the warrior Yamato and the priestess Marika, and uncover that their parents are captives of the Skull King, a shadowy tyrant named Kalverum Rex who commands ice beasts and seeks to breach their world. Drawing on Mayan history, alchemy, and paleontology, the book emphasizes themes of sibling resilience and discovery amid high-stakes chases and battles.[59][3] The sequel, Jake Ransom and the Howling Sphinx (2011), picks up shortly after, as Jake uses his father's enchanted watch to reopen the portal, intending a return to Calypsos. Instead, a malfunction hurls them into a sun-scorched desert expanse within the broader world of Pangaea, a realm fusing Egyptian lore with fantastical elements like sand golems and sphinx guardians. Reunited with Yamato and Marika, the group allies with a teenage Nefertiti and her rebel forces in the kingdom of Kush to locate the Eye of Ra—a ruby artifact capable of amplifying the Skull King's dark energies. Pursued by Kalverum Rex's legions, including scorpion-riding assassins, the protagonists navigate booby-trapped pyramids and chariot pursuits while grappling with betrayal and moral dilemmas. Infused with Egyptian mythology, hieroglyphic puzzles, and nods to historical figures, the narrative heightens the series' motifs of cultural fusion and heroic ingenuity, culminating in a desperate bid to seal the interdimensional threat.[60] Rollins crafted the series as his entry into youth literature, inspired by his adult thrillers but simplified for younger audiences, with vivid world-building that educates on global histories without overwhelming the action. No additional installments have followed, though the duology remains available in omnibus editions.[3]Recent fantasy works as James Rollins
Moonfall Saga
The Moonfall Saga is a fantasy series by American author James Rollins, representing his return to the genre following earlier works published under the pseudonym James Clemens. Set in a richly imagined world called Urth—a post-cataclysmic version of Earth where a fractured moon threatens total annihilation—the narrative blends epic adventure with elements of science fiction, exploring themes of survival, ancient mysteries, and unlikely alliances amid an impending apocalypse. Published by Tor Books, an imprint of Macmillan Publishers, the series follows a diverse fellowship racing against time to avert the "moonfall," a catastrophic event that has already warped the planet's climate and unleashed monstrous threats.[61] The inaugural novel, The Starless Crown (published January 4, 2022), introduces the core ensemble: a mute slave girl with hidden powers named Nyx, a scholarly thief, a royal outcast, and a battle-hardened knight. United by prophecy and desperation, they embark on a perilous quest through shadowed realms and forbidden ruins to unearth lost knowledge that could stabilize the crumbling moon. The story weaves intricate world-building, including biomechanical wonders and eldritch horrors, as the group confronts tyrannical regimes and unraveling cosmic secrets.[20] In the second installment, The Cradle of Ice (released February 7, 2023), the fellowship fractures to pursue divergent paths across frozen tundras and teeming metropolises, deepening their bonds and rivalries while evading a nightmarish entity born from primal darkness. Nyx's journey leads her into icy wastelands harboring ancient cradles of power, where betrayals and ambitions test the limits of their fragile unity against the escalating tide of moonfall's chaos. The novel expands the scope with vivid depictions of Urth's divided societies and the scientific underpinnings of its fantastical perils. The third volume, A Dragon of Black Glass (published February 18, 2025), propels the protagonists into sun-scorched deserts transformed into glassy wastelands, where subterranean ecosystems pulse with both awe-inspiring and terrifying lifeforms. As moonfall's deadline looms, Nyx and her companions seek a legendary weapon buried in these forbidden depths, only to awaken greater horrors that could seal Urth's doom. This penultimate entry heightens the stakes with relentless action and revelations tying the series' sci-fi roots to its epic fantasy core.[62] Throughout the saga, Rollins emphasizes conceptual depth over rote exposition, prioritizing the interplay of fate, innovation, and resilience in a world on the brink. The series has garnered praise for its ambitious fusion of genres, intricate lore, and high-stakes pacing, earning New York Times bestseller status and average reader ratings around 4.1 out of 5 on platforms aggregating reviews from major retailers. A fourth and final book, scheduled for release on February 24, 2026, is expected to conclude the narrative.[63][56]Collaborations
With Rebecca Cantrell
James Rollins collaborated with New York Times bestselling author Rebecca Cantrell on the Order of the Sanguines series, a gothic thriller blending cutting-edge science, ancient history, religious mythology, and supernatural elements. The series follows the Sanguines, an immortal order within the Catholic Church sworn to protect humanity from strigoi—bloodthirsty, undead creatures—and explores themes of faith, apocalypse, and hidden biblical secrets.[64][65] The collaboration began with the prequel novella City of Screams in 2012, which introduces the Sanguines' world through a mission in war-torn Afghanistan involving a journalist and a Sanguine operative uncovering a demonic threat tied to ancient texts. The first full novel, The Blood Gospel, published in 2013, opens with an earthquake in Masada, Israel, that reveals a long-buried tomb containing a mysterious gospel. It centers on archaeologist Erin Granger, U.S. Army Sergeant Jordan Stone, and Father Rhun Korza, a Sanguine priest, as they race to decipher the artifact amid pursuits by strigoi and shadowy church factions. A companion novella, Blood Brothers, released later that year, delves into the backstory of key characters and the order's internal conflicts.[66][67] The series continued with Innocent Blood in 2013, where Erin is drawn back into the fray after an attack in California, forcing the trio to confront prophecies of the end times and the true nature of Christ's bloodline while evading a strigoi horde. The trilogy concludes with Blood Infernal in 2015, as the protagonists journey from the Vatican to the deserts of Jordan to prevent a biblical apocalypse, unearthing artifacts that challenge core Christian doctrines. Rollins and Cantrell's partnership was praised for elevating religious history and fantasy, with The Blood Gospel described as delivering "a solid gothic mystery plot" that showcases the strengths of both authors.[68][69]With Grant Blackwood
James Rollins collaborated with thriller author Grant Blackwood on the Tucker Wayne series, a spin-off from Rollins's Sigma Force novels that features former U.S. Army Ranger Tucker Wayne and his Belgian Malinois military working dog, Kane.[49][54] The first book in the series, The Kill Switch, was published on May 13, 2014, by William Morrow. In this novel, Wayne and Kane are recruited for a high-stakes mission to extract a brilliant but unstable scientist from Russia, who possesses knowledge of a weaponized bacterial plague derived from ancient sources, blending elements of bioterrorism, historical mystery, and intense action sequences across global locations.[53] The sequel, War Hawk, released on April 19, 2016, continues the adventures of Wayne and Kane as they unravel a conspiracy involving the murder of a utopian inventor and threats to U.S. national security, incorporating themes of advanced drone technology, genetic engineering, and wartime atrocities from World War II to modern conflicts in places like Trinidad and the American South. The narrative explores the ethical boundaries of warfare and human augmentation, with Wayne navigating alliances with Sigma Force operatives while evading assassins.[54][70] These collaborations highlight Rollins and Blackwood's shared expertise in crafting fast-paced techno-thrillers that integrate scientific plausibility with military intrigue, earning praise for their character-driven plots and the unique partnership between Wayne and Kane, which adds emotional depth to the high-octane storytelling.[71][72]Adaptations and media
Film and tie-in works
James Rollins contributed to the film genre through his work as a novelization author. In 2008, he penned the official tie-in novel for Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, adapting the screenplay by David Koepp, George Lucas, and Jeff Nathanson into a prose format that expanded on the film's adventure narrative involving archaeologist Indiana Jones confronting Soviet agents in search of a crystal skull artifact. Published by Del Rey, the novel closely follows the movie's plot while adding descriptive depth to the action sequences and historical elements, serving as a companion to the blockbuster directed by Steven Spielberg.[38] Regarding adaptations of Rollins' own novels, several projects have been announced but remain in development without production to date. In March 2016, Lionsgate acquired the film rights to Map of Bones (2005), the second book in the Sigma Force series, with screenwriter Joe Robert Cole attached to adapt the story of a covert team investigating the theft of ancient bones linked to a deadly virus. The project, envisioned as a high-stakes thriller, has not advanced to filming as of late 2025.[73] More recently, in June 2024, Amazon MGM Studios greenlit a television series adaptation of the Sigma Force series, created by Matt Cirulnick—known for Absentia—and produced by Leonardo DiCaprio's Appian Way. The series will center on the elite U.S. government unit blending scientific expertise with special operations to combat global threats, drawing from the techno-thriller elements across Rollins' 20-book saga. No casting or premiere details have been confirmed.[74] Earlier efforts include a 2010 announcement by Dino De Laurentiis Company to develop a Sigma Force film franchise based on an original story within the universe, rather than direct novel adaptations, but the project stalled without further progress. No other tie-in works, such as graphic novels or merchandise lines directly linked to film projects, have been produced from Rollins' bibliography.[75]Short stories and spin-offs
James Rollins has authored numerous short stories that serve as prequels, side stories, or expansions within his thriller universes, often tying into his Sigma Force and Order of the Sanguines series. These works frequently appear as bonus content in paperback editions of his novels or in dedicated anthologies, providing deeper insights into characters and events without requiring full novel-length narratives. Many of these stories originated as promotional tie-ins but have since been compiled for broader accessibility, enhancing the lore of Rollins' interconnected worlds.[76] A pivotal collection is the 2020 anthology Unrestricted Access: New and Classic Short Fiction, which gathers ten of Rollins' short works, including both new material and previously published pieces. This volume features stories from his Sigma Force series, such as "Kowalski's in Love," which explores the backstory of operative Joe Kowalski, and "The Skeleton Key," delving into ancient mysteries linked to the series' archaeological themes. Other Sigma tales include "The Midnight Watch," "Ghost Ship," "Crash and Burn," "Tracker," and "The Devil's Bones," the latter co-authored with Steve Berry, bridging Rollins' universe with Berry's Cotton Malone series. These narratives often introduce key plot elements or characters that appear in subsequent novels, functioning as narrative bridges.[77] The anthology also includes spin-off content from the Tucker Wayne series, notably the novella "Sun Dogs," a new adventure featuring ex-soldier Tucker Wayne and his military dog, Kane, set in the Sonora Desert and expanding on their dynamic from the main series. For the Order of the Sanguines collaboration with Rebecca Cantrell, it reprints "City of Screams" and "Blood Brothers," which follow vampire-like figures in historical and modern settings, blending horror and thriller elements. Additionally, two standalone shorts—"Tagger," a young adult story from the FEAR anthology edited by R.L. Stine, and "The Pit," from George R.R. Martin's WARRIORS anthology—showcase Rollins' versatility beyond his core series.[77] Beyond the anthology, several short stories are bundled exclusively with paperback releases of Rollins' novels, acting as exclusive spin-offs or prologues. Examples include "Tracker," accompanying Bloodline, which traces a high-stakes pursuit involving Sigma agents; "Ghost Ship," tied to The Demon Crown, revealing nautical horrors; and "The Midnight Watch," paired with The Bone Labyrinth, focusing on temporal anomalies. These pieces, while concise, often heighten anticipation for full-length books and have been praised for maintaining the pulse-pounding pace of Rollins' longer works. No direct film or media adaptations of these short stories have been produced, though they contribute to the expansive media potential of his franchises.[76]Bibliography
Novels as James Clemens
Under the pseudonym James Clemens, James Rollins authored seven fantasy novels across two series, focusing on epic tales of magic, adventure, and conflict in richly imagined worlds. These works, published between 1998 and 2006, marked his early foray into high fantasy before he shifted primarily to thrillers under his Rollins name.[78]The Banned and the Banished (Wit'ch War Saga)
This five-book series follows Elena, a young woman who discovers her powers as a wit'ch in a world threatened by dark forces, blending elements of quest narratives with themes of destiny and forbidden magic. The series begins with Wit'ch Fire (1998), where Elena's transformation ignites a war against the Gul'gotha; it continues in Wit'ch Storm (1999), escalating the conflict across realms; Wit'ch War (2000) intensifies the battles; Wit'ch Gate (2001) explores interdimensional portals; and concludes with Wit'ch Star (2002), resolving the epic struggle.[79][78]Godslayer Chronicles
Rollins' second fantasy series under Clemens, comprising two novels, centers on a world where gods walk among mortals and a rogue godslayer disrupts the divine order. Shadowfall (2005) introduces the elemental realms and the protagonist Meeryn's quest to avert catastrophe, while Hinterland (2006) delves deeper into the hinterlands' mysteries and culminates in a confrontation with godly powers. No further installments were published, as Rollins transitioned away from fantasy.[80][78]Novels as James Rollins
James Rollins, under his primary pen name, has authored a prolific body of action-adventure thrillers that integrate scientific innovation, historical enigmas, and high-stakes global conspiracies. His works as Rollins, distinct from his fantasy novels penned as James Clemens, emphasize techno-thrillers and archaeological mysteries, often featuring protagonists navigating perilous expeditions and covert operations. These novels have achieved widespread commercial success, with many appearing on the New York Times bestseller list.[81] Rollins's early career featured a series of standalone novels that established his signature style of blending speculative science with real-world exploration. These include Subterranean (1999), Excavation (2000), Deep Fathom (2001), Amazonia (2002), Ice Hunt (2003), Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008), and Altar of Eden (2009). Each explores themes of hidden worlds, ancient artifacts, and environmental perils, drawing on Rollins's background in veterinary medicine and his interest in natural history.[39] The cornerstone of Rollins's oeuvre under this name is the Sigma Force series, a techno-thriller saga chronicling the exploits of a covert special forces agency recruited by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to confront threats at the nexus of cutting-edge science and historical secrets. Launched in 2004, the series spans 17 main novels as of 2025, with interconnected novellas enhancing the narrative arcs. The primary titles are:- Sandstorm (2004)
- Map of Bones (2005)
- Black Order (2006)
- The Judas Strain (2007)
- The Last Oracle (2008)
- The Doomsday Key (2009)
- The Devil Colony (2011)
- Bloodline (2012)
- The Eye of God (2013)
- The Bone Labyrinth (2015)
- The Seventh Plague (2016)
- The Demon Crown (2017)
- Crucible (2019)
- The Last Odyssey (2020)
- Tides of Fire (2022)
- Kingdom of Bones (2022)
- Arkangel (2024)
