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Mark T. Sullivan
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They’re free now, in whatever digital format you wish to use, including files for IPod, IPhone, Blackberry, Kindle, Sony Reader, B&N Reader and a host of others.
I’m not kidding. You can now download The Purification Ceremony, the first of six novels that will be freed through my website in the coming months. Enjoy!
Bio
Mark T. Sullivan has written seven mystery and suspense novels that have thrilled readers around the world, but he took a circuitous route to becoming a best-selling author.Mark grew up outside of Boston and says the best job he's ever had was selling souvenirs at Fenway Park during his high school summers. He attended Hamilton College, graduating in 1980 with a BA in English. Two weeks later, he boarded a plane bound for Niger, West Africa, where he worked as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Agades, an oasis and trading center on the ancient caravan route between Tripoli and Timbuctu. Mark rode with Tuareg nomads deep into the Sahara, immersed himself in their culture and taught their children English in a regional high school.
Upon Mark’s return to the United States in 1982, he attended the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University. He worked at Reuters, Ltd., as a financial correspondent covering the Chicago Commodities Markets from 1983-1984. He left to become a political reporter in Washington D.C., at a small wire service called States News Service where his role was backup reporter to the D.C. bureaus of the New York Times, Newsday and the New York Daily News. He also began to make a name for himself in the tough world of investigative reporting, breaking a series of stories about a financial scandal that almost toppled the nation's mortgage brokerage business.
In 1986, Mark joined the San Diego Tribune as a full-time investigative reporter. Still profoundly influenced by the experience of total cultural immersion he had experienced in West Africa, he began to develop a journalistic style that focused on the cultures of the things he was investigating. His award-winning work included a series that examined the culture of children living with addicts, and another that drew back the curtain on the culture of corporate funeral home conglomerates.
As a young boy, Mark had been an avid reader who’d dreamed of becoming a novelist. At the age of 30, he panicked at the thought that he might not follow through on his childhood dream. So he began writing fiction in his little spare time and soon had short stories published in various literary journals.
In the winter of 1990, he took a leave from his investigative duties at the newspaper and moved to Utah and Wyoming to live among extreme skiers. That experience yielded his first novel, The Fall Line (1994), which was named a New York Times Notable Book of the year, a rare honor for a debut author.
The following year, he published Hard News (1995), a mystery that exposed the underbelly of modern newspapers. The book garnered widespread critical acclaim and has become something of a cult classic among journalists.
But it was not until 1996, with publication of The Purification Ceremony, that Mark’s career broke out. The novel, told in the voice of a woman who is an expert tracker, has been published and on best-seller’s lists all over the world. It was a finalist for the Edgar Allen Poe award for best novel, won the W.H. Smith Award for best “new talent” author, and was named one of the best books of the year by the Los Angeles Times. The Purification Ceremony has been translated into fourteen languages and optioned numerous times for film, though sadly it has not yet been made.
Mark published Ghost Dance in 1999 again to widespread praise and commercial success, especially in Europe, where many of his fans live.
Labyrinth (2001) marked another turning point for Mark’s career. A thriller set in the world of endurance cavers, Labyrinth was bought for film by Scott Rudin and Paramount Pictures even before the literary rights sold. The book was an international hit and expanded the number of countries and languages where Mark’s novels have been published.
In 2003, Mark published The Serpent’s Kiss, a mystery novel set in the world of Appalachian snake handlers. BookSense 76 named the book one of the best mysteries of the year, and it became a run-away hit in German-language countries, where it sat on best-seller’s lists for almost twelve months.
Triple Cross, Mark’s newest, about an attack on a ski resort for the super-rich and powerful, has already been published in Germany where it is a best-seller under the title Limit. St. Martin’s Press will launch the U.S. edition of the novel in April.
Mark lives in southwest Montana with his wife, Betsy, and two teenage sons, Connor and Bridger. An avid skier, sportsman, martial artist and devotee of CrossFit training, Mark is also an entrepreneur with a start-up company that builds green eco-roads as an alternative to asphalt.
First and foremost, however, he remains a writer. He’s hard at work on a new novel set in the world of professional thieves, the CIA and international crime lords. It is tentatively entitled The Eighteenth Rule.