Powder Burn (Burn with Sam Blackett #1) (23 page)

BOOK: Powder Burn (Burn with Sam Blackett #1)
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About the Author

 

I grew up in a small town on the east coast of England, a town dominated by the rise of the oil industry and the decline of shipbuilding and fishing. I messed around in boats and read everything written by Alistair MacLean, Ian Fleming and many more like them – but t
he sea was a nonnegotiable part of everyone’s life in that little town, and a future as some sort of marine engineer seemed inevitable.

And then I found a copy of Robert Pirsig’s
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
in a hill cabin in England’s Lake District. A mix of a hangover and too much snow restricted any other activity – well, it was New Year – and so I read it over a couple of days.

The cover said it would change the way I thought and felt about the world, and the funny thing was
... it did. Pirsig’s exploration of quality and values inspired me to drop my plans for engineering and take philosophy along with physics at college. I also learned that books work – they’re important and they
can
change your life. I wanted to write one. I wanted to write lots.

Those were the days before
nineteen-year-olds got seven-figure advances for young-adult novels, and I (rather sweetly, in retrospect) believed that I needed to know about the world before I could write about it – at least that was my excuse for buying a one-way ticket and, with US$400 in my pocket, climbing on the plane to Los Angeles.

By the time I got home three years later, I’d had a couple of travel stories published in the
New Zealand Herald
and the
South China Morning Post
. And I’d hitchhiked to Mount Everest base camp in Tibet. In Adidas trainers. It was either my greatest achievement, or the stupidest. A year later a fully equipped British summit attempt was airlifted out from the same spot – cue icy chills down the spine when I read that news story.

I’d also got involved in the 1987 America’s Cup, a professional sailboat race. Before I knew it, I was being asked to fly around the world to glamorous places
– Honolulu, San Francisco, Sardinia and the Caribbean – and being paid to race boats. It was an impossibly long way from the life I’d grown up to in that fishing-and-oil town – and far too good to turn down. The writing would have to wait.

It didn’t have to wait long. I quickly started to write about the sport I was so immersed in, publishing hundreds of thousands of words in books and articles on sailing, and winning a couple of awards along the way. And I started to think about a novel
– I had an idea from all those philosophy lectures I had endured, a game of the prisoner’s dilemma played for life and death.
The Defector
and then the rest of the
Janac’s Games
series grew out of that idea.

My goal for that first book
, and all my novels since, was to keep the reader turning the pages, but to leave them with something to think about afterwards.

What will you do
...?

The Defector
was first published in the UK by Random House (as
The Delivery
), and got rave reviews in the trade literature. It was followed up by
The Wrecking Crew
, the second in what would become the
Janac’s Games
series. Initially, this second book was rejected by London publishers and it seemed that my fiction career was over – but I kept working at it, and a few years later HarperCollins in Australia and New Zealand published them both to coincide with what would be the last big contest in my sailing career, the 2003 America’s Cup in Auckland.

I realised that I had been given a second chance at my life’s dream of writing novels, but that this time I must fully focus on it. It was time to close the door on my sports career – I didn’t have the time or energy for both. What followed was a transitional decade, but I was still lucky enough to get involved in some very cool projects. I went to the Falkland Islands and South Georgia on a beautiful sailing boat. I got to write for some of the world’s leading magazines and newspapers, including
Esquire
and the
Guardian
, and I worked in television for a while, commentating and script-writing.

There was also a revolution in publishing going on. The Kindle and other eBook readers transformed the business opportunities for writers, and I was quick to take advantage of them to get control of the way my novels were published. The
Janac’s Games
books found success in the eBook formats, and were followed up by
The Fulcrum Files
– historical fiction of which I’m very proud – and then the first of the
Burn
series,
Powder Burn
, featuring Sam Blackett, my favourite character to date. There will be more, lots more. Just like I hoped all those years ago.

Interested in more books by Mark Chisnell?

 

The Defector

Janac’s Games #1

Can
Martin Cormac turn his back on his ruthless past as a dealer, a major city player, and do the right thing? Not when he's looking for answers in a succession of sleazy dives ...

USA:
http://amzn.to/Yu2Hqk

UK
:
http://amzn.to/YbAdHM

 

The Wrecking Crew

Janac’s Games #2

Drug baron Janac has unleashed a reign of terror in the South China Sea to fund his battle for control of the Australian narcotics trade. When he attacks an old cargo ship on an evil night off the Indonesian coast, it seems he has also found the perfect victims to e
xploit with his psychotic games.

USA:
http://amzn.to/14eHqYR

UK:
http://amzn.to/ZOgXM7

 

The Fulcrum Files

Ben Clayton was
thrown into a maelstrom of plot and counter-plot, into a world of mysteries, murder, spies and traitors. He must battle not just to survive, but to protect all that he loved and held most dear - Lucy.

USA:
http://amzn.to/AizGbU

UK:
http://amzn.to/11kKTRb

Would you like to
sign up for new-book alerts?

 

http://www.markchisnell.com/email.htm

 

Questions for the author? Connect with Mark Chisnell at ...

 

Twitter:
http://twitter.com/markchisnell

 

Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/mark.chisnell.writer

 

Goodreads:
http://www.goodreads.com/markchisnell

 

 

And
finally ...

 

At the end of every book, Kindle gives you the chance to rate it. If you think your friends would enjoy
Powder Burn
and you have a moment to give it some stars and share a thought on Facebook or Twitter, I’d be honored and eternally grateful.

Many thanks, and happy reading,

Mark Chisnell

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