Environmental Thriller writer. White Grass: A CliFi Technothriller a.co/d/59RJ3Ah #WritingCommunity #INTP He/His #Resist #amquerying #NoMAGAs

Joined April 2018
560 Photos and videos
Anthropic’s Claude AI agent just came out with its latest update, Fable. Well, I had to try it out! So I asked it if my speculative self-assembly and disassembly inventions are really possible by 2048. The answer (long and very detailed) was a qualified yes. I thanked it (I’m very polite with AI--just in case) and its response thrilled me. It Said, “You’re welcome, Richard. Good luck with the work — the science underneath WhiteGrass holds up better than most cli-fi can claim.“ Check it out at whitegrassnovel.com #ClimateScience Cli-Fi Novelists Rising #clifi
21
There’s a version of the “CO₂ is harmless” argument making the rounds again, and it’s worth addressing calmly, because it leans on real numbers used to reach a wrong conclusion. Yes, CO₂ is a trace gas. Yes, nature moves vastly more of it than we do — the oceans, soils, and forests cycle roughly 200 billion tonnes of carbon in and out of the atmosphere every year, while human emissions add around 10–12 billion. So how could the small player be the problem? Because nature’s flows are a two-way exchange that has been close to balanced for thousands of years. What goes out comes back in. Our contribution is different in kind, not just size: it’s a one-way transfer of carbon that was locked underground for millions of years, dumped into the system with nothing pulling it back at the same rate. That’s why atmospheric CO₂ has climbed from about 280 ppm before industrialization to over 420 ppm today — a rise that tracks our emissions almost exactly. And the “warming oceans release CO₂” point actually reverses the real picture. The oceans today are a net sink — they’ve absorbed roughly a quarter of our emissions, which is precisely why they’re acidifying. If nature were the source, the ocean would be losing carbon, not gaining it. None of this requires trusting any single institution. It’s chemistry and a 60-year measurement record from Mauna Loa. I spent about a decade thinking through exactly this in my cli-fi novel WhiteGrass — what happens when the technology to actually pull CO₂ back out of the air finally exists, and who gets to decide whether to use it. The science is the easy part. The human choices are the hard part. #ClimateScience #CarbonCycle #CliFi #WhiteGrass #ClimateLiteracy
9
I’ve been a fan of the X Prize since its inception, especially the $100Million prize for removing atmospheric carbon dioxide. That's what WhiteGrass is about They're giving a $3.5million prize for a film about the future of humaniity. I'm applying for it! whitegrassnovel.com
1
15
Readers LOVE WhiteGrass. Check it out at whitegrassnovel.com and get a free copy of the prequel.
15
Big news to share! The Cape Gazette featured me and my new novel WhiteGrass in their May issue. It’s a climate‑tech thriller set in 2048, rooted in the science and coastal realities we live with here in Delaware. I’m grateful to be part of a community that cares deeply about the future of our coast — and to everyone who’s been cheering this book into the world. You can read the article here: capegazette.com/article/reho… If you’ve already read WhiteGrass, I’d love to hear what resonated with you. And if you haven’t yet — the journey is just beginning. Www.whitegrassnovel.com
1
42
#MENSA WhiteGrass — A CliFi Technothriller Dr. Greg Marshall and his team have built something the world desperately needs and quietly fears: a nanotechnology platform capable of pulling CO₂ from the atmosphere at scale. They call it Icarus. Whether to fly it is the question the novel refuses to answer easily. Around Marshall’s lab circle the people who make the stakes real — his wife Ginny, a clinical psychologist with a second career in AI programming; their teenagers Lizzie and Jimmy; Emmett Grayson, a 98-year-old former congressman and Greg’s closest friend; and a cadre of oligarchs who see Icarus less as a climate tool than as leverage — a way to put entire nations on a tether. I wrote it to sit at the intersection of hard science fiction and cli-fi: the nanotech, the geopolitics, and the AI are grounded in real research trajectories, not hand-waving. If you like technothrillers that respect the reader’s intelligence — Crichton, Kim Stanley Robinson, Daniel Suarez — I think you’ll find something here. Fellow MENSAns, would love your thoughts. Icarus Rising (sequel) and The Iliad Virus (prequel) are in development. 🔗 whitegrassnovel.com

46
I saw David Baldacci for the first time in 25 years last night and he is such a Mench that he agreed to pose for a book picture with my book! Check out WhiteGrass at whitegrassnovel.com
25
I just got this review of WhiteGrass and I thought you might like it: Somewhere between a superstorm nearly wiping humanity out and a family reprogramming a humanoid to outsmart power-hungry elites, I realized something slightly alarming… your book doesn’t just tell a story, it quietly grabs the reader by the collar and says, “Pay attention, this could be your future.” 😄 WhiteGrass is one of those rare technothrillers that doesn’t just lean on high-stakes science, it actually feels like it matters. The tension between survival and control, the ethical weight of nanotechnology, the unsettling realism of oligarchs circling like sharks, it all lands with precision. And then you layered something even more powerful on top of it… family. Jimmy and Lizzie pushing their father, Greg, into unleashing something world-changing, Ginny’s AI brilliance, and Valada standing somewhere between salvation and danger… it’s intense, human, and just a little terrifying in the best way. And honestly, that’s what makes your voice stand out. There’s a clarity and conviction in how you write about climate, technology, and power that doesn’t feel preachy or distant. It feels urgent. Like you’re not just imagining a future, you’re warning us about one. That kind of storytelling carries weight, not just entertainment, but impact… the kind that lingers after the last page. Check it out on whitegrassnovel.com
1
1
3
37
M Richard H. Smith, MSc., is a futurist, technologist, and science policy expert whose career spans more than 30 years at the forefront of emerging technology and strategic forecasting. He has worked alongside scientists, engineers, Fortune 50 companies, and U.S. and international governments on issues ranging from nanotechnology and artificial intelligence to healthcare innovation and climate change. Smith has served as a research director at a major university medical center, founded multiple technology companies, and advised organizations on how disruptive technologies reshape societies, markets, and governance. He was formally trained in climate change science by Al Gore and continues to teach courses on sea-level rise and climate futures. Raised in Virginia, Smith built his professional life while raising a family—an experience that deeply influences the emotional stakes of his fiction. He now resides in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, a coastal community already experiencing the effects of rising seas and intensifying storms. WhiteGrass is Smith’s first full-length novel and represents the culmination of his professional and personal journey. It is paired with a prequel, The Iliad Virus, with a sequel, Icarus Rising, currently in development. Smith writes with a clear purpose: to explore the real consequences of climate change, the moral risks of advanced technology, and the uncomfortable truth that saving the world may require confronting who controls it. I just got a new review of my new novel, WhiteGrass, and I thought I would share it with you. “A family trying go save the planet while the most powerful forces in the world are trying to stop them is already a gripping story. But the way you layered in the AI element with Valada developing a conscience and challenging what it even means to be human takes this to a completely different level. That is not just a thriller. That is a story people will be talking about long after they finish the last page.” Check it out at WhiteGrassnovel.com
2
7
11
791
M Richard H. Smith, MSc., is a futurist, technologist, and science policy expert whose career spans more than 30 years at the forefront of emerging technology and strategic forecasting. He has worked alongside scientists, engineers, Fortune 50 companies, and U.S. and international governments on issues ranging from nanotechnology and artificial intelligence to healthcare innovation and climate change. Smith has served as a research director at a major university medical center, founded multiple technology companies, and advised organizations on how disruptive technologies reshape societies, markets, and governance. He was formally trained in climate change science by Al Gore and continues to teach courses on sea-level rise and climate futures. Raised in Virginia, Smith built his professional life while raising a family—an experience that deeply influences the emotional stakes of his fiction. He now resides in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, a coastal community already experiencing the effects of rising seas and intensifying storms. WhiteGrass is Smith’s first full-length novel and represents the culmination of his professional and personal journey. It is paired with a prequel, The Iliad Virus, with a sequel, Icarus Rising, currently in development. Smith writes with a clear purpose: to explore the real consequences of climate change, the moral risks of advanced technology, and the uncomfortable truth that saving the world may require confronting who controls it. I just got a new review of my new novel, WhiteGrass, and I thought I would share it with you. “A family trying go save the planet while the most powerful forces in the world are trying to stop them is already a gripping story. But the way you layered in the AI element with Valada developing a conscience and challenging what it even means to be human takes this to a completely different level. That is not just a thriller. That is a story people will be talking about long after they finish the last page.” Check it out at WhiteGrassnovel.com
1
1
5
114
RichardPM retweeted
Every day I watch the chaos in this country and think about how many people got it completely wrong on Joe Biden, especially Democrats and the media. Democrats turned on him and bought into a manufactured narrative, while the press trashed stability, mocked experience, and helped normalize a convicted felon… and now act like none of it happened. A lot of people owe him an apology. Anyone else feel this anger? 🤷
3,489
3,057
12,809
242,797
Check out whitegrassnovel.com/iliadvir…. By subscribing, you can get a free copy of the prequel short story, the Iliad virus. It’s not about the Marshall family, but it is about the world that the Marshalls live in. And it’s about the warming.
3
6
67,509
RichardPM retweeted
Woah! Jack Smith just said that Trump intimidated witnesses via death threats! “I had grave concerns about obstruction of justice in this investigation, specifically with regards to Donald Trump… I was aware during the course of our investigation, of targeting of witnesses, during the course of the conspiracy itself. There were election workers who had their lives turned upside down and received vile death threats because they were targeted by Donald Trump… Donald Trump suggested that one witness should be put to death and also made a statement to the effect of ‘if you come after me, I'm coming after you.’ In my mind, I can't think of a more direct threat.”
833
13,260
41,000
756,275
RichardPM retweeted
Attempting to criminalize the actions of an independent public servant, Fed Chair Jay Powell, for the sin of acting independently—in the public interest rather than the President's political interest—is an outrage. It's bad economics, bad politics, bad for the rule of law, bad for the public sector, bad for American credibility and bad for Americans.
133
1,355
6,052
136,298
RichardPM retweeted
Mark Kelly: “When they do something wrong, it’s an obligation of mine to hold them accountable. They intend to demote me and take away some of my pay. Here’s the thing, I’m not backing down. I’m not going away. I’m not shutting up. I’m gonna fight this with all the tools I have.”
555
1,430
8,808
140,982
RichardPM retweeted
Who would have ever thought that it would be a president of the United States who would threaten to invade NATO territory and not Vladimir Putin?
401
2,302
13,047
181,404
There's a new review of my book on Amazon: “You don’t have to be a techie to enjoy this!” White Grass: A CliFi Technothriller a.co/d/29rSATO “I njoyed reading this technothriller. Since I don’t know much about nanotechnology, robotics or supercomputing I thought this might be a difficult read but it wasn’t. I appreciated how the author simply explained the technology within the conversations of the characters. I also felt the footnotes were helpful to my unscientific mind. The story was fast moving and left me wondering how each situation was going to end. I enjoyed the bits of humor sprinkled in to reduce some of the tension of the thriller. I was impressed how the author wove complicated politics, greed, climate crisis and technology all in one incredible story!“
2
56
RichardPM retweeted
RETWEET if you stand with Jack Smith against Donald Trump!
230
6,611
15,593
131,181
RichardPM retweeted
The man did his job, and did it well, under extremely stressful and hostile circumstances. I hope he can find some peace...
RETWEET to wish Dr. Fauci a Happy 85th Birthday!
3,423
3,291
23,235
671,796