About Us
Meet the Mind Behind the Mission
Daniel Job brings years of real-world experience in the healthcare or IT world (insert true connection if applicable), blending sharp insight with compelling storytelling. Their passion for justice, transparency, and reform inspired this novel as a wake-up call to a system few truly understand—and even fewer are willing to challenge.

Author's Vision
A Fax LynchPin' is a riveting corporate thriller that delves into the dark underbelly of healthcare integrity. It's a story of sabotage, systemic injustice, and quiet revolution, where the battle for truth and justice unfolds within the intricate web of IT departments. Join me on this journey as we uncover the clandestine world of corporate espionage and ethical dilemmas.
About The Book
What happens when integrity collides with corporate greed?
A Fax LynchPin is a gripping thriller that explores the silent war waged behind hospital doors and firewall protections. Set in the high-stakes world of healthcare IT, this story exposes a chilling reality: not all codes are written to heal, and not every system is built to protect.
Follow a determined whistleblower as they uncover a network of sabotage, data manipulation, and suppressed truths. As layers of corruption unravel, the line between right and legal blurs—and survival means more than staying employed. It means staying alive.

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The LynchPin Protocol
Trigger Warning
A synopsis
What begins as microaggressions and false accusations—missing documentation, performance write-ups—escalates into deliberate technical sabotage. Fax channels are misconfigured, licenses vanish, and systems collapse under mysterious conditions. Ace documents everything.
His discipline and silence are not submission—they’re strategy.
Ace discovers he was never hired to help UCH succeed—he was brought in to absorb the system’s collapse. As the sabotage intensifies, including a terrifying false 911 fax storm that draws federal scrutiny, Ace activates RECON, a forensic script that traces the conspiracy’s roots from Minnesota to Belize to the Poconos. The fallout is swift and brutal—executives die, law enforcement intervenes, and a clandestine network is exposed. Yet Ace remains unbroken. With encrypted logs in safehouses and quiet alliances across borders, he refuses to fold. A Fax LynchPin is a gripping corporate thriller about digital warfare, racial isolation, and the quiet brilliance of a man who outcodes the collapse surrounding him.

Behind the disruption is a hidden alliance: his volatile manager Lando, a disengaged director, and Luigi Mazzati, a former reformer turned ideologue orchestrating acts of cyber subversion under the guise of modernization. Their goal: destabilize systems to drive contract redirection and political influence.
What begins as microaggressions and false accusations—missing documentation, performance write-ups—escalates


Themes
The Weaponization of Policy & Procedure The novel examines how HR policies, audit trails, and change controls can be weaponized—not to protect integrity, but to eliminate threats quietly and legally. It's not just sabotage—it’s plausible deniability as a strategy. Systemic Sabotage & Institutional Betrayal The novel explores how corporate structures, especially within healthcare IT, can be co-opted into mechanisms of suppression, exclusion, and coordinated deception. These aren't isolated bad actors; they're systems operating under the veneer of professionalism while enabling sabotage. Racial Isolation in Professional Spaces Ace’s journey is also deeply about the Black professional experience—the cost of outperforming in predominantly white institutions, the coded betrayals from within, and the double standards applied to behavior, success, and error. Cultural Survival & Legacy Through references to Ace’s upbringing, Mexico, and his family, the story reminds us that survival isn’t just corporate—it’s intergenerational, diasporic, and cultural. Ace isn’t just fighting for his job—he’s preserving his dignity, family, and history.
Genres
Corporate Techno-Thriller Why: The novel hinges on high-stakes sabotage within enterprise IT, involving cybersecurity, telecom exploitation, cloud migration politics, and covert countermeasures—all hallmarks of the techno-thriller genre. Comparable to: Michael Crichton (e.g., Prey, Disclosure), Neal Stephenson (e.g., Cryptonomicon), Daniel Suarez (Daemon), Joseph Finder (Paranoia). Corporate Espionage / Conspiracy Thriller Why: The plot revolves around internal sabotage, betrayal by leadership, and shadowy networks manipulating infrastructure. Comparable to: The Firm by John Grisham, The Circle by Dave Eggers. Afrofuturist Noir / Social Commentary Why: The novel centers a Black protagonist navigating hostile systems, integrating cultural memory, survival strategies, and racialized double standards. Comparable to: Colson Whitehead (for tone), Walter Mosley (for character intelligence in hostile systems), Rivers Solomon (for intersectional identity and survival). Cybersecurity Thriller / Political Tech Drama Why: The inclusion of real-world IT concepts—DNS poisoning, SIP manipulation, telemetry obfuscation—grounds the conflict in believable tech warfare. Comparable to: Zero Day by Mark Russinovich, Kill Decision by Daniel Suarez. Psychological Thriller Why: The protagonist is gaslit, manipulated, and alienated in a long game of professional and personal erasure, making for a claustrophobic, internal suspense arc.
