Simon Gervais's Blog
December 2, 2018
HUNT THEM DOWN
Hunt Them DownHunt Them DownHi Everyone,
Just a quick note to let you know that my new novel HUNT THEM DOWN, the first book in my new Pierce Hunt series, is now available for Amazon Prime members and Amazon First Reads subscribers.
I'm glad to announce that HUNT THEM DOWN debuted at #3 on the overall Kindle bestseller list in the United States, #2 in the UK and #20 in Australia.
Amazon is presently running a special promotion until December 31, 2018. You can get the hardcover edition for only $9.99. That's a 60% discount from regular price!
Warmest,
Simon
Just a quick note to let you know that my new novel HUNT THEM DOWN, the first book in my new Pierce Hunt series, is now available for Amazon Prime members and Amazon First Reads subscribers.
I'm glad to announce that HUNT THEM DOWN debuted at #3 on the overall Kindle bestseller list in the United States, #2 in the UK and #20 in Australia.
Amazon is presently running a special promotion until December 31, 2018. You can get the hardcover edition for only $9.99. That's a 60% discount from regular price!
Warmest,
Simon
Published on December 02, 2018 15:54
•
Tags:
hunt-them-down
April 13, 2016
A LONG GRAY LINE
Just a quick note to let you know that my novella A LONG GRAY LINE is now available. The story bridges the gap in between my debut THE THIN BLACK LINE and my next full-length novel A RED DOTTED LINE coming out on November 1st, 2016.
For more info, follow me at Facebook.com/SimonGervaisAuthor.
For more info, follow me at Facebook.com/SimonGervaisAuthor.
Published on April 13, 2016 19:58
March 2, 2016
Thank you!
Just a quick note to let you all know how grateful I am to everyone who picked up a copy of my debut novel THE THIN BLACK LINE. Because so many of you did, THE THIN BLACK LINE is now officially an international bestseller.
For those of you who don't follow me on Facebook, German publisher Festa Verlag bought the German rights to THE THIN BLACK LINE in November 2015. I believe they'd like the German edition to come out in 2017.
2016 will be an exciting year with one novella A LONG GRAY LINE (April 2016) and one novel A RED DOTTED LINE (November 2016) coming out. For those of you who enjoyed my debut, you'll be blown away with the next two instalments.
Warm regards,
Simon
For those of you who don't follow me on Facebook, German publisher Festa Verlag bought the German rights to THE THIN BLACK LINE in November 2015. I believe they'd like the German edition to come out in 2017.
2016 will be an exciting year with one novella A LONG GRAY LINE (April 2016) and one novel A RED DOTTED LINE (November 2016) coming out. For those of you who enjoyed my debut, you'll be blown away with the next two instalments.
Warm regards,
Simon
Published on March 02, 2016 09:12
June 13, 2015
$0.99 on Amazon
THE THIN BLACK LINE is featured as a Kindle Big Deal. For a limited time, you can purchase the eBook edition for only $0.99. Don't miss it!
Best,
Simon
Best,
Simon
Published on June 13, 2015 01:36
•
Tags:
amazon, kindle-big-deal, the-thin-black-line
March 4, 2015
From Undercover to Book Cover.
Here's my life story:
In late-January 2015, I flew to Vancouver to be interviewed by Doug Quan from PostMedia News. The article he wrote was picked up by nine of the largest newspapers in the country. I thought that might be of interest to some of you:
Had you met Simon Gervais over the years, he might have told you he was an unmarried professional poker player. Or a reporter. Or a dental clinic manager.
All of it was lies.
As a member of some of the RCMP’s most secretive units — including its air marshal program and VIP counter-surveillance team — Gervais often had to invent cover stories as he kept watch for evildoers looking to blow up planes or do harm to dignitaries.
But last September, Gervais, 35, of Ottawa, decided to uncloak himself. He turned in his badge and gun to bust out onto the literary circuit as a full-time writer of political thrillers.
His debut novel, The Thin Black Line, is out in April. It follows a husband-and-wife team, Mike and Lisa Walton, as they seek to avenge the enormous loss they suffered in a terrorist attack masterminded by Sheik Al-Assad, whose actions have brought the Western economy “to its knees.” The couple is recruited by a shadowy organization operating outside of official channels, the International Market Stabilization Institute, to carry out a secret operation.
In an interview with Postmedia News, the Montreal native said while the book is fiction, much of its contents were inspired by his experiences as a Mountie. From fistfights to firefights, “my action scenes are very realistic,” he said.
After serving as an infantry officer, Gervais joined the RCMP in 2001. After a short stint in border enforcement, he was assigned to the federal enforcement section at Toronto’s airport, where he once witnessed a young girl rat out her drug-mule mother who had swallowed several cocaine-filled pellets. He had to wait for the mother to have a bowel movement so he could fish them out.
From there, he was off to Ottawa where he’d spend four years crisscrossing the globe, from Miami to Tel Aviv, as part of the air carrier protective program.
Becoming an air marshal requires training in expert marksmanship, hand-to-hand combat and knife combat. It also requires knowing how to deal with an improvised explosive device in mid-flight.
In a worst-case scenario, Gervais says he would place a bomb next to an exit and build a barrier around it using suitcases and wet towels so the force from the explosion would be directed out the door.
Why not place it in a washroom? A plane can still fly without a door, he said. That’s not as likely with a hole in the middle of its fuselage. “Don’t try it.”
Gervais always had a cover story in case another passenger started quizzing him. Some days he was a professional gambler — he’d know where the casinos were located and what kind of card games were played at each. Other days, he was a writer or reporter.
Flights were usually uneventful, which allowed him to read or watch movies, though never with both earbuds in.
But a flight to the Middle East once got his heart racing. A passenger hit his wife and then stormed to the front of the cabin insisting he be let into the cockpit. Gervais locked eyes with his partner. Should they intervene?
They decided to let the flight attendants handle it. You never know who on the plane might be conducting surveillance on you, he said. Once you reveal yourself as an air marshal, you’re an “easy target.”
Never, he says, did a passenger blow his cover.
From there, it was on to the VIP protective detail in Ottawa. The prime minister and governor general each have their own teams of bodyguards. The VIP protective detail provides a second layer of protection for the prime minister if it’s required, but their main clients are the chief justice of the Supreme Court and the U.S. and Israeli ambassadors. They also protect visiting heads of state and their representatives.
Before a major event, they’ll sweep the site to look for anything out of the norm. Why is that window washer there at this hour? What’s up with that parked car? It’s stolen? Move it.
They know where all the entrances and exits are. If protesters are anticipated, they’ll set up an area for them. Depending on the threat level, they may call in snipers.
Foreign dignitaries bring their own bodyguards — and their own way of doing things. Gervais said he once witnessed Chinese bodyguards punching and jabbing at protesters. “If I did that here, I’d be criminally charged,” he said.
But he couldn’t complain about it, unless he wanted to start an international incident.
Gervais also spent a couple of years with the RCMP’s small counter-surveillance squad. Working in plain clothes, the unit gathers intelligence about possible threats to the prime minister and other dignitaries.
At the prime minister’s residence, he might log the licence plates of vehicles in the area. If the prime minister was attending an event at a hotel, he might look around for anyone suspicious, maybe engage them in a conversation. In this role, Gervais assumed various identities, from dental clinic manager to a homeless person.
Throughout his 12 years on the force, Gervais couldn’t shake his itch to write. On a flight back to Ottawa from England, he put pen to paper and began drafting a story based on this premise: “How cool would it be to be part of an organization in which the officers didn’t have to go through so much red tape in order to hit a terrorist’s hideout?”
With a manuscript in hand, Gervais went in search of an agent. Eric Myers of New York-based The Spieler Agency says he receives at least a hundred queries a year from first-time authors in the thriller genre and typically signs one or two. Myers said he was impressed by Gervais’ confidence and ability to sell himself.
“In today’s publishing industry, we have to consider whether a writer is able to present himself well in order to promote his book,” he wrote in an email.
“He (also) knows how to pare a plot down to its essence and to keep the story moving.”
With a two-book deal signed, Gervais quit the RCMP in September. “As much as I love this organization, you work in a box. … Now, it’s artistry. I do whatever I want. I create something.”
While creating The Thin Black Line, Gervais didn’t forget his roots. The husband-wife protagonists are from Canada and much of the action unfolds in Canada and Europe.
“The hero is an ex-RCMP officer, as well,” Gervais said. “I kind of based him on me a little bit.”
In late-January 2015, I flew to Vancouver to be interviewed by Doug Quan from PostMedia News. The article he wrote was picked up by nine of the largest newspapers in the country. I thought that might be of interest to some of you:
Had you met Simon Gervais over the years, he might have told you he was an unmarried professional poker player. Or a reporter. Or a dental clinic manager.
All of it was lies.
As a member of some of the RCMP’s most secretive units — including its air marshal program and VIP counter-surveillance team — Gervais often had to invent cover stories as he kept watch for evildoers looking to blow up planes or do harm to dignitaries.
But last September, Gervais, 35, of Ottawa, decided to uncloak himself. He turned in his badge and gun to bust out onto the literary circuit as a full-time writer of political thrillers.
His debut novel, The Thin Black Line, is out in April. It follows a husband-and-wife team, Mike and Lisa Walton, as they seek to avenge the enormous loss they suffered in a terrorist attack masterminded by Sheik Al-Assad, whose actions have brought the Western economy “to its knees.” The couple is recruited by a shadowy organization operating outside of official channels, the International Market Stabilization Institute, to carry out a secret operation.
In an interview with Postmedia News, the Montreal native said while the book is fiction, much of its contents were inspired by his experiences as a Mountie. From fistfights to firefights, “my action scenes are very realistic,” he said.
After serving as an infantry officer, Gervais joined the RCMP in 2001. After a short stint in border enforcement, he was assigned to the federal enforcement section at Toronto’s airport, where he once witnessed a young girl rat out her drug-mule mother who had swallowed several cocaine-filled pellets. He had to wait for the mother to have a bowel movement so he could fish them out.
From there, he was off to Ottawa where he’d spend four years crisscrossing the globe, from Miami to Tel Aviv, as part of the air carrier protective program.
Becoming an air marshal requires training in expert marksmanship, hand-to-hand combat and knife combat. It also requires knowing how to deal with an improvised explosive device in mid-flight.
In a worst-case scenario, Gervais says he would place a bomb next to an exit and build a barrier around it using suitcases and wet towels so the force from the explosion would be directed out the door.
Why not place it in a washroom? A plane can still fly without a door, he said. That’s not as likely with a hole in the middle of its fuselage. “Don’t try it.”
Gervais always had a cover story in case another passenger started quizzing him. Some days he was a professional gambler — he’d know where the casinos were located and what kind of card games were played at each. Other days, he was a writer or reporter.
Flights were usually uneventful, which allowed him to read or watch movies, though never with both earbuds in.
But a flight to the Middle East once got his heart racing. A passenger hit his wife and then stormed to the front of the cabin insisting he be let into the cockpit. Gervais locked eyes with his partner. Should they intervene?
They decided to let the flight attendants handle it. You never know who on the plane might be conducting surveillance on you, he said. Once you reveal yourself as an air marshal, you’re an “easy target.”
Never, he says, did a passenger blow his cover.
From there, it was on to the VIP protective detail in Ottawa. The prime minister and governor general each have their own teams of bodyguards. The VIP protective detail provides a second layer of protection for the prime minister if it’s required, but their main clients are the chief justice of the Supreme Court and the U.S. and Israeli ambassadors. They also protect visiting heads of state and their representatives.
Before a major event, they’ll sweep the site to look for anything out of the norm. Why is that window washer there at this hour? What’s up with that parked car? It’s stolen? Move it.
They know where all the entrances and exits are. If protesters are anticipated, they’ll set up an area for them. Depending on the threat level, they may call in snipers.
Foreign dignitaries bring their own bodyguards — and their own way of doing things. Gervais said he once witnessed Chinese bodyguards punching and jabbing at protesters. “If I did that here, I’d be criminally charged,” he said.
But he couldn’t complain about it, unless he wanted to start an international incident.
Gervais also spent a couple of years with the RCMP’s small counter-surveillance squad. Working in plain clothes, the unit gathers intelligence about possible threats to the prime minister and other dignitaries.
At the prime minister’s residence, he might log the licence plates of vehicles in the area. If the prime minister was attending an event at a hotel, he might look around for anyone suspicious, maybe engage them in a conversation. In this role, Gervais assumed various identities, from dental clinic manager to a homeless person.
Throughout his 12 years on the force, Gervais couldn’t shake his itch to write. On a flight back to Ottawa from England, he put pen to paper and began drafting a story based on this premise: “How cool would it be to be part of an organization in which the officers didn’t have to go through so much red tape in order to hit a terrorist’s hideout?”
With a manuscript in hand, Gervais went in search of an agent. Eric Myers of New York-based The Spieler Agency says he receives at least a hundred queries a year from first-time authors in the thriller genre and typically signs one or two. Myers said he was impressed by Gervais’ confidence and ability to sell himself.
“In today’s publishing industry, we have to consider whether a writer is able to present himself well in order to promote his book,” he wrote in an email.
“He (also) knows how to pare a plot down to its essence and to keep the story moving.”
With a two-book deal signed, Gervais quit the RCMP in September. “As much as I love this organization, you work in a box. … Now, it’s artistry. I do whatever I want. I create something.”
While creating The Thin Black Line, Gervais didn’t forget his roots. The husband-wife protagonists are from Canada and much of the action unfolds in Canada and Europe.
“The hero is an ex-RCMP officer, as well,” Gervais said. “I kind of based him on me a little bit.”
Published on March 04, 2015 05:35
•
Tags:
counterterrorism, rcmp, simon-gervais, spy-thrillers, the-thin-black-line, thriller


