Christian Cameron

Christian G. Cameron

June 2009
Born August 16, 1962
Pittsburgh, PA
Pen name Gordon Kent
Occupation Author
Nationality  Canadian
Period 1996–Present
Genre Historical Fiction
Website
www.hippeis.com

Christian Gordon Cameron (born August 16, 1962) is a Canadian novelist, who was educated and trained as both an historian and a former career officer in the US Navy. His best-known work is the ongoing historical fiction series Tyrant,[1] which by 2009 had sold over 100,000 copies.

Biography

Cameron was born in the US, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1962 and grew up in Rochester, NY, and Iowa City, Iowa, as well as Rockport, Massachusetts. He attended high school at McQuaid Jesuit High School in Rochester, NY, and got an honors BA in Medieval History at the University of Rochester. After University, Cameron joined the United States Navy as an ensign, serving in VS 31 as an air intelligence officer and gaining his air observer wings before going to spend the rest of his military career as a humint officer, first with NCIS and later with DHS in Washington, DC. Cameron left the US military in 2000 as a lieutenant commander. While still serving in the Navy, Cameron proposed his first novel with his father (Kenneth Cameron, American novelist and playwright) to HarperCollins UK, which was published in 1996 as Night Trap in the UK and Rules of Engagement in the United States. In 2002, Cameron wrote his first solo novel, Washington and Caesar, published by HarperCollins in the UK and Random House in the US. Also in 2002, Cameron moved to Canada and married his wife, Sarah. They have one child, Beatrice.

Alan Craik series

The Alan Craik series of espionage thrillers was conceived on a camping trip in the Adirondacks in 1994-5 and the events of the first book are very loosely based on the activities of John Anthony Walker and his son, father and son spies working for the Soviet Union against the United States Navy. Christian Cameron envisioned the books as a modern-day Hornblower series, depicting the life of a modern naval officer from his earliest career until his retirement. Over the course of eight novels, Alan Craik changes from a patriotic, enthusiastic and driven young man to a cynical and ambitious middle-aged man who resigns as a Captain to protest the use of intelligence to justify bad political decisions.

Tyrant series

The Tyrant series was born in the classrooms of the Classics Department of the University of Toronto, where Cameron decided to write a series of historical novels in 2003. From 2003 to the present, Cameron has written six Tyrant novels: Tyrant (2008),[2] Storm of Arrows (2009) and Funeral Games (2010) as well as King of the Bosporus (2011), Destroyer of Cities (2013) and Force of Kings (2014). The Tyrant series is set in the time of Alexander the Great and concerns the history of the Euxine area and the inter-relations between the Greeks and Scythians. Cameron also produced a single volume fictional biography of Alexander entitled God of War which ties into the Tyrant series. God of War was published in 2012.

Long War series

The Long War series is Cameron's second historical series, also published by Orion in the UK. Cameron intends to write a series that covers the whole of the Persian Wars from a first-person point of view, while deliberately playing with some of the reader's perceptions of both history and the way that 'adventure' or 'boy's own' genre fiction is written. The first book, Killer of Men, named after Achilles, the man-killer of the Iliad, (published in 2010) follows in first person the life of Arimnestos. The next instalment of the series is Marathon (published 2011), which as the title suggests culminates with the battle of Marathon. Poseidon's Spear (2013) is the third instalment which spans some of the decade between Marathon and the Persian invasion of Greece with a more personal tale of adventure, exploration and revenge. The Great King (2014) is the latest addition to the series and it is expected that there will two more instalments as listed below.

Chivalry Series

Christian Cameron at a reenactment in Verona Italy

The Chivalry series is Cameron's third historical series, also published by Orion (May 2013). Based loosely around the exploits of Sir William Gold, one of Sir John Hawkwood's lieutenant's in Italy, this series begins with Gold's life as a goldsmith's apprentice in London just after the great plague of 1347 and will continue through the Battle of Poitiers and the Savoyard Crusade, as well as the Peasants' Revolt of 1381, right through to the Battle of Agincourt in 1415, covering the history of the period—military, chivalric, and literary—in England, France, Italy, and Greece and roughly in parallel with the career of Chaucer's knight. Geoffrey Chaucer is a major character, along with John Hawkwood and Jean Le Maingre.

Traitor Son Cycle

Planned as a five book fantasy series with an alternative medieval setting. The major story arc will take the Red Knight from the relative obscurity of command of a little-known mercenary company to fame, international renown, worldly power, and confrontation with the real powers of his world and perhaps with his own belief system.

Reenacting

Cameron is a passionate reenactor, and uses the experiences of reenacting, including knowledge of the material culture and the skill sets required to recreate any portion of life in the past as essential tools in realizing his novels.[3] Cameron helps organize and direct military and non-military reenactments in the United States, Canada, and Europe. In 2011, Cameron, with the help of Greek reenactor Giannis Kadaglou, put on the 2500th anniversary of the Battle of Marathon in Marathon, Greece [4] with over 100 reenactors from all over the world and thousands of Greek spectators. In addition to recreating the life of an early 5th-century Plataean Hoplite, Cameron also runs a group dedicated to the role of rangers and Native Americans in the American Revolution, and participates in tournaments as a knight of the late 14th century.

Bibliography

text
Reenactors in phalanx at Marathon, September, 2011

As Gordon Kent

Alan Craik series
Novels
  • Night Trap
  • Peacemaker
  • Top Hook
  • Hostile Contact
  • Force Protection
  • Damage Control
  • The Spoils of War
  • The Falconer's Tale (2007)

As Christian Cameron

  • Washington and Caesar
  • God of War, (2012)
Tyrant Series
Novels
  • Tyrant, (2008)
  • Storm of Arrows, (2009)
  • Funeral Games, (2010)
  • King of the Bosporus, (2011)
  • Destroyer of Cities, (2013)
  • Force of Kings, (2014)
Long War Series
Novels
  • Killer of Men, (2010)
  • Marathon, (2011)
  • Poseidon's Spear
  • The Great King
  • Salamis (13 August 2015)
  • Plataea (2016)
Chivalry series
Novels
  • The Ill-Made Knight
  • The Long Sword (2014)
Tom Swan Serial
e-books, 6 or 7 to a complete novel

Novel One

  • Tom Swan and the Head of Saint George 1: Castillon
  • Tom Swan and the Head of Saint George 2: Venice
  • Tom Swan and the Head of Saint George 3: Constantinople
  • Tom Swan and the Head of Saint George 4: Rome
  • Tom Swan and the Head of Saint George 5: Rhodes
  • Tom Swan and the Head of Saint George 6: Chios

Novel Two

  • Tom Swan and the Siege of Belgrade 1
  • Tom Swan and the Siege of Belgrade 2
  • Tom Swan and the Siege of Belgrade 3
  • Tom Swan and the Siege of Belgrade 4 (April 2015)
  • Tom Swan and the Siege of Belgrade 5 (May 2015)
  • Tom Swan and the Siege of Belgrade 6 (June 2015)
  • Tom Swan and the Siege of Belgrade 7 (July 2015)

Novel 3

  • Tom Swan and Last Spartans 1 (October 2015)
  • Tom Swan and Last Spartans 2 (TBA)
  • Tom Swan and Last Spartans 3 (TBA)

As Miles Cameron

Traitor Son Cycle
Novels
  • The Red Knight (2013)
  • The Fell Sword (2014)
  • The Dread Wyrm (October 2015) [5]
  • The Plague of Swords (TBA) [5]
  • The Fall of Dragons (TBA) [5]
Short stories
  • The Messenger’s Tale I (2013) prequel to The Red Knight [6]
  • The Messenger’s Tale II (2014) set between The Fell Sword and Tournament of Fools [7]

References

  1. "A brainy Hellenistic bromance". The Globe and Mail. March 10, 2010. Retrieved March 12, 2011.
  2. Foex, B. A (2008). "Back to the future: emergency departments and ancient Greek warfare". BMJ 337 (dec15 1): a2761–a2761. doi:10.1136/bmj.a2761.
  3. Christian Cameron: Representing the past, http://arts.nationalpost.com/2012/03/01/christian-cameron-representing-the-past/
  4. History brought to life as Battle of Marathon re-enacted, http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gXARXuUc4gFuTJbWh-RY5zRXX50Q
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Phokion (Christian Cameron) (24 March 2014). "Fell Sword (Agora)". Hippeis (Christian Cameron).
  6. Miles Cameron, "The Messenger’s Tale I", Hippeis (Christian Cameron)
  7. Miles Cameron, "The Messenger’s Tale II", Hippeis (Christian Cameron)

External links