Tuesday, November 6, 2012



Coming December 2013, my first Urban Fantasy
Go To Hell
What would you give to cure mankind's suffering?   
Dr. Spencer Williams, a brilliant young researcher, is on the verge of that discovery.  Haunted by the freakish suicide of his famous mother, he is driven to find a cure for the illness that ended her life.  Blessed--or cursed--from birth with second sight, Spencer's personal grail is within his grasp.  Through a secret mix of blood magic and genetic engineering, he has synthesized Marvan, a miraculous medicine that could leapfrog mankind to the next evolutionary phase. 
But Spencer has huge hurdles to clear.  Getting a new drug to market takes big bucks.  And how exactly is he supposed to keep Marvan's unique formula a secret?  As word of his discovery leaks out, powerful players want a piece of the action.  Hell, they want it all.   Spencer must make the choice, does he go with the devil he knows or the devil himself?
 

Sunday, October 21, 2012


The following link takes you to a piece in today's Hartford Courant.  I'd originally entitled the piece, "Why Your Insurance Company Wants you Dead."


http://articles.courant.com/2012-10-19/news/hc-op-atkins-insurance-rules-dangerous-for-mentall-20121019_1_substance-abuse-medication-lethal-doses

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Saturday, August 11, 2012

The attached link is to a recent piece I wrote for The Hartford Courant.  It's one small piece of the much-larger healthcare crisis in this country.  While there is ample blame to be shared around--and physicians can help themselves to a double portion--the insurance industry has woven tremendous and unnecessary cost into the system.The Insurance Denial: A Study in Passive-Aggressive Behavior

Monday, July 16, 2012




Starting this fall I'll be on the road with day-long trainings on the topic of Bipolar.  These are CU/CEU events through Premier Education Solutions, Inc. (PESI).  The first six will be in Connecticut, Rhode Island and Ohio.  To see the flyer click on this link Flyer for bipolar training

http://www.amazon.com/The-Bipolar-Disorder-Answer-Book/dp/1402210574/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1342431766&sr=8-1&keywords=the+bipolar+disorder+answer+book

As these get closer I'll post information about the materials to be covered.

The first three dates are:

Shelton, CT
Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Cromwell, CT
Thursday, September 20, 2012

Warwick, RI
Friday, September 21, 2012

To order copies of The Bipolar Disorder Answer Book, or to get the e-version, purchase locally or on-line.
The Bipolar Disorder Answer Book

Tuesday, May 1, 2012


Let's E-Publish a Book
Step Two: My New Name
By Charles Atkins

Okay, I've decided to E-Publish my novel GO TO HELL, a just-written urban fantasy.  My next thought is to do this under a pen name.  Why?  Here goes, first this book is a new genre for me--urban fantasy.  GO TO HELL is a Faustian tale with a variety of supernatural beings, including Lucifer and a sexy pair of succubae.  It's quite a departure from my previous real-world mysteries and thrillers.  

I've also done a couple non-fiction books where I--or probably the publisher--decided to leave the MD at the end of my name.  Charles Atkins, MD made perfect sense for books on Bipolar Disorder, Alzheimer's and Dementia.  And Charles Atkins was fine for mysteries and thrillers.  Also, back in the day (sometime last month) when thinking about bookstore shelving was important, having a name begin with A was good. 
But first let's be frank...or Sheila, or Harry, there are other reasons for me to pick a nom de plume.  They all apply to varying degrees.  Charles Atkins is not a bestseller.  This does matter in the world of publishing.  It's tremendously important in traditional publishing where your advance, and whether or not someone is even willing to take a risk on your next book has everything to do with your sales numbers.  So even if I weren't looking to e-publish it's not unusual for a mid-list author to pick a new name in an effort to re-start a career.  Like wiping the slate clean.  Sure, Charles Atkins isn't a best seller, but maybe Germaine Floxbottom will be.

Next, there's the matter of the content of the new book.  While primarily an entertaining read; it's also a parable and contains quite a bit of social commentary.  GO TO HELL is a fun look at the whorish nature of the relationship between physicians and the drug companies.  It's the story of a doctor selling out the human race for profit.  In his case, it's with the best of intentions, but the result is the same.  In truth, doctors are heavily influenced by the big pharmaceutical companies.  Ethical boundaries are crossed and no one seems to notice, or if they do, it's rapidly dismissed with--"it's in the patient's best interest" or "just because I go to the free dinner, sporting event, show...Caribbean cruise loosely disguised as a continuing education event, doesn't mean my medical decisions are being influenced".   Right, so what does this have to do with my name?  While a smaller point, I do think the book's content can create a distraction for my day job.  And so the nom-de-plume offers a separation between me the author and me the doctor. 

I don't see a tremendous downside to using a pen name.  I guess you don't get the same ego rush from seeing your name on the book jacket--or whatever it's now called on an e-book.  I think that's a small thing.  And yes, there is something to be said for your grandmother leaving copies of your book scattered around her apartment for all her friends to see, but I've had that experience.  It was great.  It's time to move on.

And now to pick the new name.  Some have recommended I go with an anagram of Charles Atkins.  Unfortunately Larches Skinta, Carl Shetkains, Harel Catskins etc aren't doing it for me.  So...what I've chosen is an amalgam of family names.  My Dad's in particular.  He doesn't use his first name--Jaspard.  I think it's rather groovy, and for urban fantasy it's got a slightly freakish edge.  So I'm taking Jaspard and combining it with my mother's maiden name--Marks.  There we go, I'm now a new person, or at least a new author or...whatever.  GO TO HELL by Jaspard Marks, that should work.

As a psychiatrist I don't want to over think what it means to rename yourself.  Or worse still, split myself into two people.  Maybe a better context is to think of this as starting a new business or product line.  There's Charles Atkins, Charles Atkins, MD, and now--new for 2012--Jaspard Marks.

Saturday, April 21, 2012


Let's E-Publish a Book
Step One: Deciding what to Publish
By Charles Atkins

Every journey begins with a step...at some point I'll Google that and find out who said it.  But here's the journey...or at least the goal.  I've decided to e-publish a book, and to recreate myself...a part of myself?...as a writer of urban fantasy.  To start, I've been very fortunate in my writing career.  No, I'm  not a best seller, but I've had quite a few books published.  This is a big deal, in the passing age of publishing with its crushing rejection, where getting an agent and a book deal(s) were hurdles that many authors were never able to clear.

This is all changing, perhaps it already has.  With the radical shift in the publishing paradigm from 'few can get published, to everyone and their granny can get e-published' it's time to rethink my life as an author, what I want to write and how I'm going to get it to readers.  So, the journey starts.  I may take some short cuts, but I know I'm not the only one figuring this stuff out.    
Here's the plan.   And yes, I find it's good to map these things out, like writing an outline for a new novel.  The plan may go to pieces, and the steps taken can diverge wildly from what was intended.  Still, a map is a nice way to get started.

Step 1.  Decide what I'm going to publish:
I've got a few ideas on this one, but two books that aren't far from being publishable spring to mind.  First is a Faustian tale of a young doctor who creates a pill that alleviates all human suffering.  Sadly, it comes at a cost and the devil--yes, Lucifer himself--will have his due.  The other is a lovely--albeit meandering multi-generational saga where once a generation a child is born with the ability to heal.  It often doesn't go well for that child as the book dips in and out of a beautiful fantasy realm based on Gypsy--and other--folklore.  Those are the two front runners.  And clearly where I'm taking some serious short cuts--I've got a couple books ready or near-ready to go.  

Choice A, entitled--GO TO HELL--is essentially ready.  It's with my agent and has received quite a bit of rejection.  That said, the rejection has been strangely positive.  One editor wrote back, "if this had been ten years earlier my answer would have been different."   Other comments have been similar, no form letters saying thanks but no thanks.  All thoughtful responses about why they're hesitant to give the green light.  At the end of the day it's because they're not certain the book will make money.  People are nervous and publishing books--at least the old way with paper and ink--is expensive.  E-publishing--at least in my naive head state is cheap, just format, post and publicize.  For the sake of these blog pieces I'll be meticulous about actual costs.

Choice B--My multi-generational sage will require a rewrite.  I've written and rewritten this one so many times, I just need to pull my head around two ways it can go, commit to one and haul my butt through its many pages to smooth and tighten--about a month's work...maybe two.

I've a third choice as well, but this book is not yet written and I just finished a fifty--or so--page outline, which needs lots of work.

Clearly, the easiest is to go with Choice A.  Yes, baby has just taken his first step.  I'm going to e-publish GO TO HELL.  Now what?

Wednesday, April 18, 2012


Vultures at Twilight (Severn House)
From psychiatrist and author Charles Atkins comes the first in a new Mystery Series!
"...a too-hot-to-handle thriller that will keep readers on the edge of their seats." --Booklist
"...will keep readers turning the pages until the dramatic conclusion."--Publisher's Weekly

Something wicked has come to Grenville Connecticut a town famous for antiques and the systematic fleecing of its well-heeled elders as they down-size, sicken and die. Clearly, someone is unhappy with the status quo as high-end antique dealers are being murdered in gruesome--yet fitting--ways.
          When a severed finger shows up at the Friday night auction, unlikely heroines Lil Campbell and Ada Strauss have to wonder--where's the rest of the body?  A question that leads to festering small-town secrets, and the unraveling of a mystery that shows all is not well in a town famed for its postcard perfect New England charm.
          For Lil and Ada, the murders take a personal turn as unspeakable accusations are raised against Lil's dead husband and she becomes the focus of the killer's rage. And to make things worse--or better--the two friends are forced to confront powerful feelings for one another that threaten their idyllic lives.

Charles Atkins is a board-certified psychiatrist and  author.  He writes fiction and non-fiction, including the Barrett Conyors forensic thriller series as well as books on Alzheimer's and Bipolar Disorder.   Dr. Atkins has written hundreds of articles, columns, and shorts stories for professional and popular magazines, newspapers, and journals.  He's been a consultant to the Reader's Digest Medical Breakthrough series, and his work has appeared in publications ranging from The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) to Writer's Digest Magazine.  He's been twice featured in the New York Times, as well as many other publications.
Visit his website and blog at:  www.charlesatkins.com and www.charlesatkinsmd.blogspot.com
ISBN: 9780727881410

Saturday, February 25, 2012


Here's a fun--and free--murder story I've posted on my Redroom page.  If you like, please repost and share around.


http://redroom.com/member/charles-atkins/writing/the-dancer

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Congratulations On Your New Book | Charles Atkins | Blog Post | Red Room

Congratulations On Your New Book | Charles Atkins | Blog Post | Red Room
 
Congratulations on Your New Book
By
Charles Atkins
Years back I was in therapy.  "What?" you ask, "You, the epitome of mental health?  Say  it's not so."  Well, let's just say it was part of my training as a psychiatrist.  All of which brings me to something brilliant my therapist said.  It was this,
          "Congratulations."
          "For what?" you ask.
          For getting my first book written.  Not published, just written.  And here's the  point.  Why is it so difficult for many of us to acknowledge the good things in life in the moment?   We are admonished to 'not rest on our laurels'.   I think it goes even deeper, that somehow stopping to enjoy our achievements is wrong or big headed.   
          Let me break it down.  For years, possibly my entire conscious life I've been a writer, and have wanted to write books.  As a medical student this blossomed and I began to win some essay contests and have smaller pieces published in literary journals and some of the bigger medical ones.  As a resident this picked up speed and finally I started in on my first book-length manuscript.  As with many writers this first novel-length extravaganza was a roman á clef aka thinly veiled autobiography.  It was about a conflicted gay surgeon who finds love and liberation.  Along its 600 pages it veered into action adventure, there might have been a murder, boy met boy, lost him and then found him again, I seem to recall a hurricane in Mexico where my main characters formed an impromptu medical response team, and it was all tied up with a happy ending that involved an unexpected inheritance and beach-front property.  I see you wincing, and please bear with me.
When I'd completed this masterpiece, there was no fanfare.  No patting myself on the back.  It was just done and I was off and running trying to think about what to do next.  Send it to publishers?  Find an agent.  So when I told my then therapist I'd finished my book and he said, "Congratulations".  I stopped dead.
Right, I thought, I've just achieved something I've always wanted, something big, and yet I didn't take a millisecond to stop and recognize the moment.  What was that about?  And I realized a couple important things.  First, my ambition as a writer is far more about the process than the product.  How do I become the best writer possible?  How do I continue to get published and reach a bigger audience?  It's a constant striving toward what comes next.  Like deciding to do a blog, if even in the beginning no one reads it.  There's nothing wrong with any of that.  Yet, there's something equally important on the other side of this forward movement.  The moment itself.       
Over the years, as I've become successful in my two careers--author and psychiatrist--this theme repeats.  This week my ninth book under my own name arrived in the mail--VULTURES AT TWILIGHT (Severn).  There was no fanfare.  A UPS truck dropped off my author copies in a brown cardboard box in front of the garage.  I went out, saw the box, wondered if it was something I bought on eBay or Amazon, and then I spotted the address from my publisher.  It was the new book. 
I took it inside, ripped off the tape and got my first look at something I started writing over ten years ago.  This particular book has been through many incarnations on its long road to publication.  I examined the glossy cover, which has a beautiful image of a misty cemetery and my name in bold letters over the title.  I read the inside jacket, the back blurbs--not a wrong note anywhere.  It's a lovely book.  I opened the cover and saw the dedications to my grandmother, great Aunt, and my mother in law--three women filled with love and light.  I felt dueling impulses--pride at the achievement and the opposing Puritanical voice--"And pride goes before a fall."  "Shut up!" I told that second voice.   I held the new book, and  reveled in the moment.  "Congratulations, Charles.  It's a beautiful new book.  Congratulations."    

Wednesday, February 8, 2012




 



Overcoming Addiction
By
Charles Atkins, MD


"Wouldn't it be great if you could love me first and let the bottle wait?"
--Dolly Parton
"They tried to make me go to rehab, I said, ‘No no no.’"
--Amy Winehouse

You know it’s killing you.  The alcohol, cigarettes, pain pills, illegal drugs whatever the habit is that you’ve tried to change—repeatedly—but without success.  Your conversations with yourself are familiar as a favorite tee shirt, “I’ve got to stop…I’ll do it tomorrow.”  And then tomorrow comes, and with it the urge to drink/smoke/use illicit drugs and despite your best intentions you give in.  “Okay, tomorrow then.  I’ll really stop tomorrow.”  So what’s wrong with us that we persist in behaviors that harm us?  And most importantly, how does someone finally make the needed change?
As a psychiatrist who works with people with drug and alcohol dependence I spend a lot of time on these questions.  While the answers can be complex, I’m drawn to some basic truths.  First, the destructive habit--whatever it is--serves a purpose, at least initially.  The "why" someone begins to drink or use drugs varies from person to person.  Alcohol provides a sense of relaxation and well being.  For people who are anxious or socially awkward it helps lubricate their tongues and makes them feel at ease in social situations.  Opiates (pain pills to heroin) induce a state of euphoria and relieve not only physical pain, but emotional suffering, as well.  It’s no coincidence that so many survivors of abuse and trauma become addicted to heroin and prescription opiates. 
For teens experimentation with drugs and alcohol has become a passage rite.  The not-fully wired adolescent brain doesn't register the danger in the behavior, and it’s during these young years where most pick up habits that turn ugly in time.  The magnitude of this is followed by annual surveys that monitor high-risk behavior in teens.  In 2009 24% of high-school students engaged in binge drinking, nearly ten percent had driven in the past month when they'd had alcohol, roughly 30% had been passengers in a car where the driver had been drinking, 20% smoked cigarettes, 20% had used prescription drugs without a doctor's order, over six percent had tried cocaine and/or Ecstasy, and 2.5% had tried heroin. 
Once established, negative behaviors take on a rhythm and turn into a habit.  A smoker hears the phone and lights up, the morning cup of coffee is accompanied by a smoke, and every work break includes a quick cigarette or two.  A drinker anticipates the weekend, or the end of the workday as the time for the first beer or cocktail.  Passing a liquor store they think about whether or not there's enough booze in the house, or who they’ll meet up with for drinks at a favorite watering hole. 
Depending on the drug of choice, problems start to develop and can damage any and all aspects of a person's life--physical and/or mental health, relationships, job, finance.  An arrest for Driving under the Influence (DUI) starts a cascade of losses and legal problems.  Physical effects of excessive drinking emerge, and dependence--the body's need for the continued presence of a substance--takes hold.  An opiate addict no longer gets the euphoric high, but instead is chased by the physical and emotional agony of withdrawal “Jonesing" that turns her life into an unending search for the next fix.  The alcoholic becomes shaky in the morning, starts to drink throughout the day, has unbearable anxiety, poor sleep, and somewhere around the 20-year mark of heavy drinking heads into serious alcohol-related diseases such as cirrhosis and certain cancers.  A dangerous and potentially fatal withdrawal syndrome--delirium tremens (The DTs)—traps the drinker and their ability to “just go cold turkey” is no longer a safe option.  As for cigarettes, there’s little doubt that they represent the number one cause of preventable death in this country from heart disease, cancer and stroke.
What's remarkable is that even in the face of terrible losses--job, health, family--the destructive behavior persists.  Deceit and minimization of the problem is common, and attempts to quit or cut back are frequent and short lived.  Motivation to do something about the behavior is mercurial, changing from moment to moment. 
Yet people can and do change.  And just as the reasons why someone starts a destructive habit are varied, the paths that lead someone to put down a bad habit are particular to them.  At some point there is an awakening and with it a call to action.  "This is killing me and I've got to stop."  For others it may be an external force, a spouse threatening to leave, a child who can no longer bear to see you drunk and cuts you out of their life, an illness or serious legal problem that's a direct result of the addiction.  Regardless, something in the equation shifts and motivation moves into action: throwing away the cigarettes, dumping the booze down the drain, checking into a detoxification program, attending a 12-step meeting.  Again, there are many paths and depending on the behavior, the severity of the addiction and the person these vary from “going cold turkey” on your own to intensive treatment.  Some will require the services of medical professionals to get them through potentially dangerous withdrawals (alcohol and certain Valium-family drugs), and many will turn to rehabilitation programs, drug counselors and well-established self-help groups such as AA and NA.  The first days are the hardest as well-worn patterns of behavior, and cravings have to be resisted and changed.  This is where familiar slogans from 12-step groups such as AA become life savers, “One day at a time”.  “Today I’m not going to drink or drug, I’ll deal with tomorrow when it comes.”     
What is clear for everyone who has successfully put aside a destructive habit is that they’ve transformed a desire to change into action.  In time, the old destructive behavior is replaced with newer and healthier ones.  As I often tell my patients, putting down a bad habit is both easy and hard.  The hard part is “just don’t drink” and the easy part is, “just don’t drink”.