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Virtually Undead: High-Tech Crime Solvers Kindle Edition
Michael Foreman is a neurosurgeon, hard-working, successful and highly respected. In his spare time, he plays the piano.
Ralph Guthrie is a gamer. He makes his living playing online games. He also plays the clarinet. Ralph Guthrie and Michael Foreman are old friends and play together in an amateur jazz band.
But when Ralph is invited to play and critique a new video game, Virtually Undead, and suffers a fatal heart attack, along with nine other players, it quickly becomes apparent that virtual reality has reached out of the virtual world and into the real.
Why has a gas explosion rocked the city? Why has the New York sewer system repeatedly expelled raw sewage into the city’s waterways? And why does a single traffic light downtown persistently malfunction, causing cars to repeatedly crash?
Are all these things tied together? If so, how and why?
When the NYPD and the FBI ask Michael Foreman to consult, he can’t resist the challenge, and finds himself quickly drawn into the escalating mayhem of a video game that’s becoming all too real.
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- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateApril 3, 2020
- File size418 KB
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Editorial Reviews
From the Author
Virtually Lace by UviPoznansky
Virtually Undead byRobert I. Katz
Virtually Harmless by P.D.Workman
Virtually Dead byEdwin Dasso
Virtually Gone byJacquie Biggar
Virtually Timeless by CasiMcLean
Virtually Undetectable byLibby Fischer Hellmann
Virtually Impossible byBarbara Ebel
This power team of authors offersalso a cookbook with great recipes accompanied by cooking scenes from thisseries and from their books:
Virtually Yummy: Recipes that Inspire
From the Inside Flap
The brain is the softest organ in the human body, barely firmer than a bowl of custard. Brains contain numerous structures within a very small volume and most of these structures are barely visible to the naked eye. A soft organ is an easily damaged organ, and brains are both fragile and poorly defended behind skulls that are not so difficult to crack.
Brains are tasty, as well, if you're a lion, a tiger or a bear, and nutritious, with a high fat content. The thought floated through the back of Michael Foreman's mind. People eat them, too, those who can stomach the idea--cow brains, pig brains, lamb brains and even squirrel brains, (definitely not human brains, thank you, Doctor Lecter), so long as they're appropriately cooked and seasoned...though there was that tribe in New Guinea who did eat human brains and preferred them raw. Turned out to be a bad idea, since eating uncooked brains gave them Kuru, an inevitably fatal type of spongiform encephalopathy, similar to mad cow disease.
Nope. Eating raw brains is a bad idea. Pan fried, with a little salted butter, some garlic and a dash of black pepper, that was supposedly the way to go...or maybe in a Szechuan hot pot, or curried--a favorite delicacy, or so Michael had read, in Southern India.
Not that he had ever eaten a brain. He pondered the idea, now and then, but...no. Just no.
Strange, how one's mind wandered at 3:00 AM.
Concentrate, damn it...
Delicate, precise movements are required to operate on the brain. It's not a field for the clumsy. You don't want to operate on some small, delicate structure and then, oops, too bad about the violin lessons.
Not a joke. It had happened.
"Syringe," he said. "Ten cc."
The scrub nurse handed him a syringe filled with ten cc's of radio-opaque dye. He attached the syringe to the catheter and gently pushed on the plunger. It flowed easily. He injected the whole ten cc's, ready to stop at the slightest resistance.
Michael, the nurses and the techs all wore lead aprons under their gowns, the reason why the OR was kept at an otherwise uncomfortable fifty-eight degrees. The anesthesiologist, Bernie Fleck, and his resident were dressed in scrubs and OR jackets. Michael nodded to Bernie and he and his resident moved behind a leaded screen. Michael stepped on the peddle. The x-ray machine beeped and a rotating picture of the patient's cerebral vasculature appeared on the two big screens suspended on the wall, each tiny vessel delicately outlined, showing no obstruction to blood flow.
To Michael Foreman, Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery and Radiology, the soft sound of the ventilator, the steady beep of the ECG, the high-pitched tone of the pulse oximeter and the hushed voices of the anesthesiologist and his resident were familiar and soothing. These things meant the patient was soundly asleep, as stable and healthy as it was possible to be under the unfortunate circumstances that had brought him to the OR, and everything was proceeding as it was supposed to.
The operating room environment was second nature to him. By now, Michael was attuned to it. If anything was out of place or not as it should be, he would know, instantly and without thought.
The patient was sixty-seven years old with a history of atherosclerotic heart disease, diabetes and hypertension. His name was Sam Levinson. He was borderline obese and led a sedentary lifestyle. He liked to fool himself that a round of golf every other week or so constituted exercise, but riding around in a golf cart, stopping now and then to whack a ball, while eating a ham sandwich and drinking a couple of beers was not what any physician would call actual 'exercise.'
Nope. Lousy shape, elevated cholesterol, elevated triglycerides and high blood pressure: a set-up for what had happened to him.Vascular disease rarely exists in isolation. The buildup of occluding plaque in the coronary arteries is almost always mirrored by a similar occlusion in other arteries throughout the body. In this case, more specifically, the carotidarteries, from which a small bit of schmutz (a perfectly acceptable medical term, in Michael Foreman's opinion), composed of one part fatty cholesterol and three or four parts blood clot, had broken off. It then floated upward and lodged within a smaller artery in the brain, blocking blood flow to the portion of the brain fed by that artery.
A cerebrovascular accident had immediately ensued--a stroke, in layman's terms.
The patient had collapsed, drooling and semi-conscious, one side of his face going slack, able to move but unable to express himself beyond a series of terrified grunts. The patient's son-in-law, whose own father had not long ago suffered a similar unfortunate event, recognized the signs. A quick call to 911, a short ride in an ambulance, and now, here they were, in the interventional neuroradiology suite at the University Hospital of Staunton College of Medicine, at 3:00 AM in the morning, well within the golden three hours that supposedly allowed for at least a possibility that the offending clot could be removed and the patient's faculties restored.
Product details
- ASIN : B0859KVRPV
- Publisher : Uviart
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : April 3, 2020
- Language : English
- File size : 418 KB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 109 pages
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Book 2 of 8 : High-Tech Crime Solvers
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,144,203 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #2,015 in City Life Fiction (Kindle Store)
- #2,185 in Medical Thrillers (Kindle Store)
- #3,481 in Assassination Thrillers (Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

I grew up on Long Island, in a pleasant, suburban town about 30 miles from New York City. I loved to read from a very early age and graduated from Columbia in 1974 with a degree in English. Not encouraged by the job prospects for English majors at the time, I went on to medical school at Northwestern, where in addition to my medical degree, I acquired a life-long love of deep dish pizza. I did a residency in Anesthesiology at Columbia Presbyterian and spent most of my career at Stony Brook, where I ultimately attained the academic rank of Professor and Vice-Chairman for Administration, Department of Anesthesiology.
When I was a child, I generally read five or more books per week, and even then, I had a dim sense that I could do at least as well as many of the stories that I was reading. Finally, around 1985, with a job and a family and my first personal computer, I began writing. I quickly discovered that it was not as easy as I had imagined, and like most beginning writers, it took me many years to produce a publishable work of fiction. My first novel, Edward Maret: A Novel of the Future, came out in 2001. It won the ASA Literary Prize for 2001 and received excellent reviews from Science Fiction Chronicle, InfinityPlus, Scavenger’s Newsletter and many others.
My agent at the time urged me to write mysteries, as mysteries are supposed to have a larger readership and be easier to publish than science fiction. Since I have read almost as many mysteries as science fiction and fantasy, and since I enjoy them just as much, I had no objection to this plan. The Kurtz and Barent mystery series, Surgical Risk, The Anatomy Lesson and Seizure followed between 2002 and 2009. Reviewers have compared them favorably to Patricia Cornwell and Robin Cook and they’ve received positive reviews from The Midwest Book Review, Mystery Review Magazine, Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, Lady M’s Mystery International, Mystery Scene Magazine, Library Journal and many others.
In 2014, I published a science fiction short story, “To the Ends of the Earth in the Deep Blue Sea” on Kindle for Amazon. Since then, I have made all of my previously published novels available for purchase on Kindle and now, in June, 2017 I am about to embark on a new venture. I will be publishing new novels on Kindle, the first of which is entitled The Cannibal’s Feast. It’s a science fiction story of corporate warfare in space. The next, coming out in early 2018, will be another science fiction novel tentatively entitled The City of Dust, a tale set on an abandoned world after the collapse of the First Interstellar Empire of Mankind.
For further information, please visit my website, robertikatz.com and for updates on upcoming books, stories, promotions and author appearances, please subscribe to my email list at robertikatz.com/join.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this book to be a brilliant tale with great characters. They appreciate the technical details, with one customer noting how well the medical and VR aspects are explained.
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Customers enjoy the story quality of the book, with one customer describing it as a brilliant tale and another noting it's a wonderful mixture of medical mystery.
"This was an excellent story with great characters, all of the medical details right (as one would expect since the author is an MD), plenty of action..." Read more
"A brilliant tale from the ‘High Tech Crime Solver’ series, ‘Virtually Undead’ by USA Today bestselling author Robert I. Katz is a wonderful mixture..." Read more
"I really like this story. It was well done and the characters flowed nicely. I like the interaction between the gamer and the Dr very much." Read more
"Engaging story, but......." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book.
"This was an excellent story with great characters, all of the medical details right (as one would expect since the author is an MD), plenty of action..." Read more
"I really like this story. It was well done and the characters flowed nicely. I like the interaction between the gamer and the Dr very much." Read more
"I liked a lot about this story. The characters were interesting, the tech details believable, and things moved along swiftly...." Read more
Customers appreciate the technical details in the book, with one review noting they are believable and well-explained.
"This was an excellent story with great characters, all of the medical details right (as one would expect since the author is an MD), plenty of action..." Read more
"...because of the nature of the case, is so well told, the complexities so well explained in terms the average reader can comprehend, that non-geeks..." Read more
"...The characters were interesting, the tech details believable, and things moved along swiftly...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 24, 2023Killed while playing a virtual action game . So many questions . Piano playing neurosurgeon, Michael Foreman, lost his best friend in that game. He wanted answers .
I like this author very much and was led to this series from one of his other books . He is knowledgeable about medicine, academic medicine and is a terrific sci fi author . Interesting use of sub text for emphasis , vocabulary you can look up if you don't know the word. His writing is well done, if somewhat academic at times, no typos .
- Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2021This was an excellent story with great characters, all of the medical details right (as one would expect since the author is an MD), plenty of action, and great use of gaming and VR details. I did have one issue with the author's style. I'm not sure if he thinks his readers have the memory of a gnat, have experienced neurological deficits, or what, but the repetition of each character's full name over and over again nearly drove me up the wall, to the point that I mentally skipped over the last name. Otherwise, I would have wound up throwing my Kindle across the room in frustration. I have a feeling I am not the only reader who can remember a character's name from one paragraph to the next without having it literally spelled out for me! I will be looking for more of Dr. Katz's books to read, but I'm hoping the next one gives me a break on character names.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 8, 2020A brilliant tale from the ‘High Tech Crime Solver’ series, ‘Virtually Undead’ by USA Today bestselling author Robert I. Katz is a wonderful mixture of medical mystery, police procedural and cutting-edge techno-thriller. The series itself explores new and interesting possibilities of how new technology can be used for crimes. The police, of course, are quite a few steps behind the curve in this respect and need to call in Katz’s protagonist, neurosurgeon Michael Foreman, to help them navigate what must be the strangest case they have ever handled. Ten players, of hundreds beta testing a state of the art virtual reality game, all suddenly die of the same cause. Was the game too realistic it provoked the premature demise of these participants? Or are we faced with a complex serial killing, spread over ten different cities? Unfortunate accident or the work of a diabolical murderer?
The story, though undoubtedly complicated because of the nature of the case, is so well told, the complexities so well explained in terms the average reader can comprehend, that non-geeks will really enjoy the book. Katz’s characters, some borrowed from other books in the series, others unique to this writer, are superbly drawn and highly believable and help the story move forward at an enjoyable fast pace.
Definitely an interesting and original crime thriller and highly recommended.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 31, 2020You can't go wrong if it's by Robert I. Katz. He seems to have a midas pen. Whatever he writes turns to gold. Follow him if you think you can keep up. I can promise you won't regret it.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 4, 2020I really like this story. It was well done and the characters flowed nicely. I like the interaction between the gamer and the Dr very much.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 7, 2020Dr Michael Foreman, besides being a neurosurgeon, is also a pianist. Not so farfetched. It seems a lot of doctors are. One of the members of his band is a heavy games player who gets himself killed while playing a virtual reality game. Michael is stunned and offers his services to the police as a consultant. No matter how hard they try to keep him offside, he manages to get in the center of things.
Although done with the best of intentions, the game gets out of control. Michael is stunned to discover that ten people died playing it.
All the technical capabilities seem like they are either here or soon will be. A most entertaining and frightening look at medical/biometric capabilities today.
It is not a dry book. Michael is keeping company with a girl he really doesn't like. He has parents whom he almost never sees. The whole book is very well done.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 21, 2020I liked a lot about this story. The characters were interesting, the tech details believable, and things moved along swiftly. However, in places the editing wasn't very good (repetition mostly), and characters' full names were used over and over and over to the point where I was mentally leaping over them. For example, Harold Strong. I got so tired of seeing his entire name, I was gritting my teeth. The other thing that drove me nuts was the overuse of "so." It started way too many sentences, was often followed by an unnecessary comma, and I saw it so many times, I considered not finishing the book. Editor was not good enough for this job; author should hire someone better, because this could and should have been a five-star read.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 31, 2020The novel turns into an unrealistic reality. The story is technology based, but the narrative is such that it is not a turnoff for us uninitiated. An excellent plot, well developed, that grips the reader. The story contains a gaggle of engrossing, sometimes odd (or different type) characters. Michael is very successful but nearing burnout. Another important character is Ralph, a gamer extraordinary. A clear to the point writing style tops the story. A cracker-jack tale. Reviewed by the author of The Children's Story, About Good and Evil.