|
It may come as a shock, but the John J. Nance you’ve
come to know as America’s preeminent broadcast Aviation
Analyst on ABC World News and Good
Morning America happens to be the very same
John J. Nance who’s built such a large worldwide
following as the New York Times Best-Selling author of
those celebrated aviation-based thrillers that have been
causing fans so many sleepless nights over the past decade.
John J. Nance the author, broadcaster (and licensed
attorney), is the same John J. Nance who’s
becoming one of North America’s most dynamic and in-demand
professional speakers, motivating hundreds of corporate,
medical, and hi-tech audiences to communicate and cooperate
as pilots do in airline cockpits.
Thirty years and 13,000 hours of flight time as an airline
and Air Force pilot have formed the basis of his respected
credibility in aviation, but his unequaled talent as a storyteller
of unforgettable characters and amazing plots has thrust
his highly successful literary career into a class by itself.
John J. Nance combines lightning-paced,
intelligent fiction with realistic characters you can’t
forget. As the Seattle Times
said in 1996, “John Nance simply has no peers in this genre.”
ORBIT, the 18th major book by John J. Nance, released in March of 2006 to almost universal rave reviews and forms a new milestone in thriller fiction, combining the best elements and character depth of literary fiction with a high-speed page-turner. SAVING CASCADIA,
John's 17th major book and 12th heart-stopping thriller
adds to his string of previous successes such as, FIRE
FLIGHT (Simon & Schuster, 2004),
SKYHOOK (Putnam,
March 2003), TURBULENCE
(Putnam, April 2002), HEADWIND (Putnam, April 2001) and BLACKOUT
(Putnam, February 2000). BLACKOUT
was named “one of the best books of 2000” by the Los
Angeles Times Book Review. Earlier worldwide successes
include The New York Times’
best-selling PANDORA'S
CLOCK, MEDUSA'S
CHILD, and THE
LAST HOSTAGE with PANDORA'S
CLOCK and MEDUSA'S
CHILD each having also become highly successful two-part
mini-series for network television.
Click here to view other books by John J. Nance. Click here for book reviews.
|