Marc Neerman, a retired Army Colonel with nearly forty years of service in military intelligence and special operations, has published his debut novel, 50 States of Terror: The Plot to Cripple America, a fast-moving, technically grounded thriller that imagines a coordinated terrorist attack on all fifty U.S. state capitals, executed simultaneously on Independence Day.
The book, written without the use of artificial intelligence and dedicated to the men and women who protect American security without recognition, follows Mohammad Abu al-Fadi, an Iranian shipping magnate whose father is killed during a confrontation between his cargo ship and a U.S. Navy destroyer in the Red Sea. What begins as grief hardens into obsession and then into planning, as Mohammad assembles a force designed not to kill the most people, but to break the most trust.
Neerman's background distinguishes the novel from the typical thriller. Having served in intelligence assignments from battalion to national level, taught at the Army Intelligence School, the Special Warfare Center, and the National Defense University, and deployed across regions from Southeast Asia to the Middle East, he brings procedural specificity to both sides of the story the planning of the attack and the race to stop it. The institutional friction of the American response is written with as much accuracy as the operational tradecraft of the threat.
50 States of Terror is available now in hardback and digital formats through major online retailers.

