Jon Stock

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Jon Stock
Jon Stock 2015.jpg
Jon Stock
Born (1966-05-12) 12 May 1966 (age 58)
Occupation Author and Columnist
Nationality British
Genre Spy thriller

Jon Stock (born 12 May 1966 in England) is a British author and journalist. He was educated at Sherborne School in Dorset and at Magdalene College, Cambridge, England. He lives in Wiltshire with his wife and three children.[1] He has three brothers one of whom is Andrew Stock former president[2][3] of the Society of Wildlife Artists.

Journalism

Stock is a full-time author and journalist. He was the editor of the Weekend section of the Daily Telegraph in the UK from 2005 till 2010.[4] He left the paper in January 2010 to complete a trilogy of spy thrillers and returned in March 2013 to edit the paper's online books channel, before rejoining the staff as Weekend editor in June 2014.[4] Additionally he was a columnist for The Week magazine[4] in India, contributing to their column "The Last Word" from 1996 until 2012.[5] He previously worked in New Delhi, India, for a period of two years, as a foreign correspondent for the Daily Telegraph, and has also lived in Cochin, Kerala.[1]

Bibliography

Stock has written five books,[6] all of them spy novels. The Riot Act (1997) was published by Serpent's Tail, The Cardamom Club (2003) was published by Blackamber (now part of Arcadia Books),[1] and in India (2004) by Penguin Books, Dead Spy Running (2009, published by Blue Door) was the first in the Legoland trilogy.[7] The fourth book, Games Traitors Play (published by Blue Door on 3 March 2011), was the second in the trilogy.[6] His fifth book Dirty Little Secret (Blue Door, 1 July 2012) was the concluding book in the Legoland trilogy.[4][7]

The Riot Act was short-listed by the Crime Writers' Association for its best first novel award.[1] It has been published in France by Éditions Gallimard as Lutte Des Casses (2002)[8] as part of its acclaimed Série Noire[9] imprint.

Legoland trilogy

Stock signed a three-book deal in July 2008 with Blue Door, a new HarperCollins imprint,[10] for "a good six-figure sum", according to The Bookseller[11](15 July 2008). The spy novel series, all starring MI6 officer Daniel Marchant, commenced with Dead Spy Running, which was published on 7 January 2010.[11][12] The second in the series was Games Traitors Play, published on 29 September 2011.[6][13] The last in the series, Dirty Little Secret, was released on 5 July 2012.[14]

While researching for Dirty Little Secret he came across the Seraj, an Iranian fast attack craft based on the high-performance British speedboat, the Bradstone Challenger.[15] Stock wrote a detailed article in the Daily Telegraph,[16] on how the Iranians plan to use it as a fast attack boat against the United States Navy in any future conflict in the Strait of Hormuz.[16]

Movie deal

Warner Bros. acquired the movie rights to the Dead Spy Running franchise in October 2008 to make the first of a proposed three-movie franchise,[17] they signed on Charlie's Angels director McG[17] to direct the movie along with Stephen Gaghan to write the screen play.[18] It was initially reported that after the shooting of McG's last movie Terminator Salvation,[19] he would be taking up the shooting of the remake Captain Nemo: 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea,[20] but with the cancelling of this movie by Disney[20] it had appeared that Dead Spy Running was the next movie to be taken up. In March 2012 it was reported that Jonathan Levine was in talks with Warner Bros to direct Dead Spy Running,[21][22] but in September 2012 Warner Brothers announced that they had hired Adam Wingard to direct, and Simon Barrett to rewrite the screenplay of Dead Spy Running.[23] Wingard and Barrett have worked together on indie horror movies, including You're Next, V/H/S and A Horrible Way to Die.[23] In 2014, McG has bought the movie rights with his own company, Wonderland Sound and Vision, and the film is currently in development.[24][25]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. ANDREW STOCK Mall Galleries. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
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  7. 7.0 7.1 Legoland Trilogy Goodreads.com, 18 November 2014.
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  12. "Dead Spy Running", Telegraph Bookshop.
  13. "Games Traitors Play", Telegraph Bookshop.
  14. "Dirty Little Secret", Telegraph Bookshop.
  15. "Iran's new super-fast naval gunships", CNN Security Clearance – CNN.com Blogs, 24 August 2012. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  16. 16.0 16.1 Jon Stock, "Little boat, big danger: how a British-made speedboat has become a weapon in Iran's standoff with the US", The Telegraph, 20 August 2012. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
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  23. 23.0 23.1 Mike Fleming Jr, "Warner Bros Sets Director Adam Wingard And Scribe Simon Barrett For ‘Dead Spy Running’", Deadline, New York. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  24. Nellie Andreeva and Mike Fleming Jr, "McG’s Wonderland Now A Monied Company", Deadline Hollywood, 25 June 2013.
  25. "McG's Wonderland Sound and Vision Gets a Little 'Fractured'", The Tracking Board, 17 April 2014.

Games Traitors Play