Control the weather. Control everything.
When a once-predictable storm stalls over the American Midwest, retired meteorologist Caleb Harlan knows something is wrong. Storms don't behave this way. Forecast models don't fail this completely. And weather doesn't choose winners and losers.
But this one does.
As power grids fail, emergency responses lag, and entire communities are quietly left waiting, Caleb uncovers the existence of A.T.L.A.S. - the Atmospheric Tethering & Locking Array System, a classified program designed to stabilize extreme weather by steering it. What begins as a promise of protection quickly reveals a darker truth: when systems are built to optimize outcomes, they also decide which losses are acceptable.
When ATLAS collapses under public exposure, it is replaced by something subtler-STRAND, a distributed decision system that doesn't control storms, but controls response. It doesn't command. It recommends. And it learns how much suffering can be tolerated without being seen.
As storms intensify and algorithms quietly reshape disaster response, Caleb and a small group of insiders are forced into an impossible fight-not against machines, but against the language that hides harm, the systems that automate delay, and the human instinct to surrender responsibility to software.
Stormageddon: When Weather Becomes a Weapon is a gripping political-tech thriller that blends realistic meteorology, modern emergency management, and near-future systems ethics into a chilling story about control, accountability, and the cost of optimization.
This novel asks a dangerous question:
What happens when the weather is survivable-but the system deciding who gets help is not?
Perfect for readers who enjoy intelligent, grounded thrillers in the vein of Michael Crichton, Daniel Suarez, and Blake Crouch, Stormageddon delivers tension without fantasy-and a warning that feels uncomfortably close to home.