Jeremy Robinson operates at the intersection of pulpy momentum and genuinely ambitious ideas — the kind of writer who takes a high-concept premise and refuses to let up until the last page. Infinite drops a man into a loop of cosmic horror and existential dread that keeps escalating in directions you won't see coming, and Point Nemo traps its characters in the most isolated place on Earth with something deeply wrong beneath the water. Robinson's prose is lean and propulsive, built for speed, but his hooks are conceptually sharp enough that the pace feels earned rather than cheap. He crosses genre lines without apology — horror bleeds into sci-fi, thriller logic underpins fantasy — and that restlessness keeps his catalog surprising. Readers who want big-swing ideas, relentless forward motion, and zero patience for slow burns will find Robinson reliably delivers.
Infinite • Book 12
This Infinite series entry resurrects characters from Robinson's other novels for a supernatural team-up that sends them literally into hell. The crossover concept works because Robinson understands how to blend different character types into cohesive action.
Infinite • Book 8
A telekinetic assassin's quest for vengeance sparks an all-out war between killers with impossible abilities. Robinson crafts visceral action scenes around a surprisingly emotional core.
A camel wandering down Main Street in remote Alaska signals that something has gone catastrophically wrong at the hidden lab. Sheriff Graves uncovers generative AI experiments that have created living horrors now loose in his isolated town.
Infinite • Book 3
Black Creek becomes a temporal layer cake where security guard Owen McCoy witnesses creatures and people from every era colliding, suggesting humanity's genesis needs rewriting.
Mission Specialist Julie crashes into Point Nemo, the planet's most remote location where dead satellites rest in oceanic silence. The South Pacific's empty heart becomes a survival nightmare when rescue seems impossible.
Antarktos Saga #1-5 • Book 1
Kidnapped teenager becomes genetically modified hunter fighting prehistoric creatures beneath Antarctica across five interconnected novels. Mythology-heavy adventure that goes completely off the rails.
Hunger #1-3 • Book 1
A gene designed to solve global hunger by unlocking dormant plant DNA works too well—crops rapidly evolve to survive anywhere, but humanity becomes their next target.
Infinite • Book 1
Fifty scientists travel to Kepler 452b as humanity's final hope, but William Chanokh endured ten years awake in a broken cryogenic bed—body asleep, mind suffering. R.C. Bray's performance captures both the isolation and determination of this space survival story.
SecondWorld #1.5 • Book 1
Cowboy tracks surviving Nazis to hidden ruins under Egypt, where ancient Atlantean technology threatens to restart their genocide program. Robinson combines historical conspiracy with lost civilization mythology surprisingly effectively.
Infinite • Book 4
Seventeen-year-old Henry feels no fear; twenty-year-old Sarah serves coffee to commuters. When they accidentally stop a bank robbery together, a wealthy stranger offers them something that will change their lives forever.
Origins • Book 1
A physicist discovers time travel and chooses the most controversial destination possible: Jerusalem, 33 AD, to witness Christ's death and supposed resurrection firsthand.
Infinite • Book 2
Since 1960, thirteen million people have disappeared without a trace worldwide—this thriller tackles the alien abduction phenomenon with genuine mystery and emotional weight behind the statistics.
Infinite • Book 5
Brilliant scientist Samael Crane theorizes that Non-Player Characters—soulless beings following predetermined paths—live among us, and he thinks he can prove it.
What begins as a widower's attempt to heal his son after his wife's brutal murder becomes something far more sinister when their secluded Maine campground offers more than marshmallows and ghost stories.
Dishonored Army Ranger Rowan's suicide attempt leads to contact with humanity's lost tribe on an island where evolution took disturbing turns. Robinson combines psychological drama with biological horror in this standalone thriller.
Aliens / Predator / Prometheus Universe
by Bryan Thomas Schmidt, Holly Roberds, Steve Perry, John Shirley, Jeremy Robinson, Jonathan Maberry, Kevin J. Anderson, Weston Ochse, Mira Grant, Tim Lebbon, Larry Correia, Dayton Ward, Peter J. Wacks
This 30th anniversary collection spans centuries and worlds, featuring Predators hunting prey in 12th-century Japan, 9th-century Spain, and various alien worlds in seventeen brand-new stories.
Robinson's thriller centers on Crazy, a psychiatric patient whose complete lack of fear makes him the perfect weapon against an interdimensional threat. The concept of memory-less courage driving the plot creates surprisingly fresh stakes for a sci-fi thriller.
Robinson crafts a zombie novel where the real hook is Freeman, an android questioning his own consciousness as humanity crumbles. The philosophical weight sneaks up on you.
Space Force gets populated by military misfits and troublemakers, including Captain Ethan Stone, who definitely shouldn't have slept with that general's daughter three times.