BIO
A Seattle native, Wyler’s parents
died early, leaving him on his own by the time he entered college.
He supported himself with various jobs including being a fry cook
at a drive-in and a professional musician playing drums for various
local blues and jazz groups. In his first year of medical school,
he knew he wanted to specialize in neurosurgery. Upon graduating
from residency he started on the faculty of the University of Washington
and then the University of Tennessee where he developed an international
reputation for pioneering surgical techniques to record brain activity.
In 1992 the prestigious Swedish Medical Center recruited him back
to Seattle to develop a neuroscience institute.

Prepping patient for craniotomy as visiting Professor
to the Hong Kong
Neurosurgical Society
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Closing same case
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Surgical teaching session in Hong Kong
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Wyler’s love of thrillers began in 1974 on his way to Cincinnati
to take the oral boards in neurosurgery. At SeaTac airport he picked
up a copy of William Goldman’s Marathon Man to read
on the flight. He became so engrossed he stayed up all night to finish
it before stoking up on coffee and meeting with the examiners. He
aced the exam.
Wyler develops plots from actual events
in his practice. While serving on a committee charged with selecting
the medical center’s
new computerized medical record system he wondered what might happen
if the software had a random bug. From this came the story line for Deadly
Errors, his 2005 thriller that has been subsequently translated
into several foreign languages, including Russian. Crime
Spree Magazine wrote:
“There is a grand tradition of medical thrillers in the suspense field
- hardly surprising since medicine is one place where life's rubber really
meets the road. A new entry, Deadly Errors, by a new author, Allen
Wyler, is right up there with the best.”
Much of the background for Dead Head,
a story about keeping a detached head alive for the information
in the brain, was derived from Wyler’s own research on recording the brain’s
electrical activity. As Adam Woog (Seattle Times) wrote:
“Wyler's premise is deliriously over-the-top… (You'll notice I'm
avoiding any cracks about how fiction writing ain't brain surgery.) But the
story barrels right along, and, as Wyler points out in an afterword, the science
of maintaining a disembodied head is already chillingly close to reality.”
Wyler’s
third thriller, Chop Shop, originated a few
years ago, when demonstrating surgery in Hong Kong. He removed the
drapes covering a detached cadaver head. The moment he looked at
the dead face, he got a creepy feeling and wondered what it would
feel like if, perchance, he knew him. So this is the story’s
set-up. His protagonist has this exact experience but the head is
his best friend.
In 2002 he left active practice to become Medical Director for a
start-up medical technology company, Northstar Neuroscience, which
went public (NSTR) in 2006. At the end of 2007 he retired to devote
full time to writing.
He and his wife divide their time between their downtown Seattle
condo and home in the San Juan Islands.
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