Jenny Ahmed writes shocking dystopian, science fiction, and political thrillers with punches that grab the readers. In February 2025, Jenny won a gold medal in the worldwide Literary Titan book contest for By Dawn's Early Light. The New York Weekly, the New York Telegraph, and the Tampa Bay Observer ran stories about her. Radio appearances have been on the Author Show and the Seeta Show throughout South Florida.
After a career as an ICU/ER nurse, law, and with a degree in genetics, Jenny has folded this knowledge into writing. Having the medical knowledge, Jenny can create more realistic works. Writing was always in Jenny's blood, and for many years worked as a writer and copywriter. She grew up on a farm in the south, and her only friends were her imagination and three horses.
Jenny is married and lives in New York City. She has a tribe of many grown children and grandchildren. Some of her weird hobbies are quilting, painting, gardening, fencing, playing the violin, piloting, and traveling. Hands down, Jenny's favorite place in the world is sitting in the Old Town of Prague, watching the Astronomical Clock and sipping on Grog. She loves collecting Moser glass and Matryoshka dolls.
Jenny Ahmed writes shocking dystopian, science fiction, and political thrillers with punches that grab the readers. In February 2025, Jenny won a gold medal in the worldwide Literary Titan book contest for By Dawn's Early Light. The New York Weekly, the New York Telegraph, and the Tampa Bay Observer ran stories about her. Radio appearances have been on the Author Show and the Seeta Show throughout South Florida.
The sequel to the critically acclaimed novel AWAKE
They escaped the simulation.
They defied the loop.
But the truth was never meant to be found.
Chaya, Jian, Omar, and Khalid have emerged from the constructed biosphere into a reality even stranger than the one they left behind. The world beyond is vast, ancient—and listening. Every step forward...
Four strangers-Chaya, Khalid, Jian, and Omar- regain consciousness in a lush, closed biosphere with no names, no pasts, and no way out. The surrounding jungle is wrong. Monitored. Controlled. Designed.
As they unravel the truth about the world they inhabit, they realize this is no accident. It's a test....
A new world was the mission. A secret civilization changed everything.
When Dr. Delilah Dweck, a decorated physician, boards the first manned mission to Mars, she’s chasing the dream of discovery. Alongside her is astrobiologist Dr. Jacob Stern, and a handpicked team of elite scientists, each prepared to leave Earth behind forever....
Radiation burns lead MUFON investigators Dr. Rachel Katz and Adam Reid to Area 291, the forbidden scar off Malibu. With Woods Hole biologist Dr. Jasper, they dive a...
Every time I sit down to write, I’m reminded that stories don’t always come to us fully formed. They unravel like a path through the woods—sometimes clear, sometimes foggy, and sometimes leading somewhere I never expected. That’s part of the magic. Sometimes an idea pops in my head I can't get the words on the paper fast enough. Then there are times I really have to claw my words out, but eventually the light goes on in my head and the magic happens.
Hello, writer. Yes, you—the one staring at the blinking cursor, wondering if your story matters. I want to tell you something from one writer to another:
It does.
You do.
And the world needs your words more than you think.
When I first started writing, I was overwhelmed by doubts. What if no one reads this? What if it's terrible? What if I’m just wasting my time?
But here's what I learned—and what I hope you'll hold close as you start your own writing journey:
Tonight I was talking to my coach, Lynn, and we were comparing how the writing environment has changed over the years. Writing is unlike any other forms of art out there. If you're a singer, actor, or artist, success brings expensive cars and palatial homes. Not so much the writer. With the inventions of Amazon, AI, and others, any rewards coming to writers get chipped away. There are many writers out there who make $0 or even $0.01 in royalties off each book sold. If you've never written a...