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About Martin Roth Martin Roth was born in New Zealand in 1949. He graduated in law from Auckland University and then went to work as a reporter on the now-defunct Auckland Star. He followed this with 15 months on papers in the British West Midlands (the Express and Star in Wolverhampton and the Sunday Mercury in Birmingham) and six months working on kibbutzim in Israel, before travelling to Japan in 1976 for a short working holiday. He ended up staying there 17 years.
His publisher then asked him to write the first English-language guide to the joys of saké (Japanese rice wine). And so together with one of Japan’s leading saké writers and judges he blissfully embarked on a drinking tour of Japan’s 1,300-odd saké breweries, only to see the project shelved when a rival publisher came out with its own English-language book on the subject.
During his final seven-and-a-half years in Tokyo he worked as a securities analyst with British merchant banks, and his next book was a concise introduction for foreigners to the Japanese stock market. It was conservatively written, but the publisher unwisely titled it "Making Money in Japanese Stocks
In Australia, he worked for a year on the Sunday Herald Sun, then set himself up as a freelance author, with a string of non-fiction books, most notably the best-selling annual "Top Stocks In 2009 Ark House Press published the first novel in his Johnny Ravine series, "Prophets and Loss," followed in 2010 by "Hot Rock Dreaming (a finalist in the 2011 Australian Christian Book of the Year awards). "The third in the series, "Burning at the Boss," was published in 2012. In 2011 he launched his Military Orders series of ebook thrillers. He now lives in the suburbs of Melbourne with his Korean wife and three sons. |
Click on image for more details. Military Orders ![]() Festival in the Desert ![]() Military Orders ![]() The Maria Kannon ![]() Brother Half Angel
![]() Burning at the Boss ![]() Hot Rock Dreaming ![]() Prophets and Loss |