Mark Gilroy

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Mark Gilroy January 5, 2016

Sydney Lane Inks Deal with Stephen & Ross Lawhead

PUBLICITY CONTACT: JEANE WYNN
918-283-1834 | jeane@wynnwynnmedia.com

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 STEPHEN & ROSS LAWHEAD INK 3-BOOK DEAL WITH SYDNEY LANE PRESS

NASHVILLE—In an extraordinary start to 2016, Sydney Lane Press has inked a deal with Stephen and Ross Lawhead to publish the Hero Trilogy, a retelling of the Gospel story set in a chilling, dystopian future America.

Stephen Lawhead's works have sold millions of copies and been compared to literary luminaries C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tokien, and George R.R. Martin.

Stephen Lawhead’s works have sold millions of copies and been compared to literary luminaries C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tokien, and George R.R. Martin.

The project was conceived through a collaboration of Stephen and Ross Lawhead with Grammy-nominated songwriter and performer, Eddie DeGarmo. DeGarmo and co-writer Bob Farrell created Hero: The Rock Opera. The live event opened with Michael Tait, Mark Stuart, and Rebecca St. James in lead roles. Hero was performed theatrically 21 times. The bestselling soundtrack won two Dove Awards.

DeGarmo turned to the Lawheads, who have garnered numerous literary awards and sold millions of books, to bring Hero to life in book form. The three books imaginatively capture the coming of the Messiah in an age controlled by a One World Government that parallels the brutal Roman World of Jesus’ life and ministry.

“We wanted to re-introduce the incredible power of the Gospel narrative by placing it in a world of danger and intrigue the modern reader will immediately relate to,” said DeGarmo. “There was no one better than the Lawheads to pull off that incredible writing feat. The storyline they created from our musical still amazes me.”

“I’ve always loved to write about real and imaginary worlds that are steeped in meaning,” said Stephen Lawhead. “To faithfully retell the Gospel in a future where truth and life is dictated by a tyrannical bureaucracy was a challenge, a delight, and a labor of love.”

“I was honored to work on Hero,” said Ross Lawhead. “Eddie originally approached me to illustrate a graphic novel, with my dad writing the script. I couldn’t help pitching my own ideas and so I became co-author. It was a thrill to then be asked to co-author the novels, which allowed us to fully expand the story’s themes, plots, and characters. The Gospel is truly the greatest story ever told—I believe we’ve managed to put an exciting spin on it in retelling it this way.”

"We are pleased and proud to publish this amazing series."

“We are pleased and proud to publish this amazing series.”

“I was introduced to Stephen Lawhead’s writings with the Pendragon Cycle,” said Mark Gilroy, president and publisher of Sydney Lane Press. “There is a reason Stephen’s works are compared to those of literary giants like J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis. The parallels Stephen and Ross draw to the four Gospels are brilliant. We are pleased and proud to publish this amazing work.”

City of Dreams releases in August 2016. New and existing fans of the Lawheads will be pleased to learn that Rogue Nation and World Without End will follow in four-month intervals.

Sydney Lane Press of Nashville, Tenn., is a new publishing company founded by veteran book publishing executives Mark Gilroy and Brian Henson in the fall of 2015. The Sydney Lane catalog will have twenty titles by the end of 2016. Visit www.sydneylanepress.com for more information.

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Filed Under: Publicity

Mark Gilroy December 14, 2015

My Dangerous Life

My Dangerous Life in the Shadows

My Dangerous Life in the Shadows

Some know me as an author. Some know me as a publisher. Some know me as a marketer. Some know me as a family man. Some know me as a neighbor.

But few know the secret, shadowy world of my dangerous life.

It’s true. If people only knew all the dangerous adventures I’ve experienced in my life, they would be impressed, amazed, somewhat frightened—and understandably skeptical. But I can prove it. It’s all documented in black and white.

As a child, my tribe was attacked by Aleuts and then forced to leave our harsh but idyllic island home—I was left behind and marooned when I tried to save my brother. After wild dogs killed my only companion, I survived alone for eighteen years on San Nicolas Island off the coast of California. (If you don’t believe me, read Island of the Blue Dolphins.)

Still in my youth, I was hired as a cabin boy to follow a map across the sea in search for buried treasure. I was wise beyond my years and had a keen eye. I knew from the start that the one-legged “sea-faring” man couldn’t be trusted. Sure enough, Long John Silver took me hostage during a bloody mutiny on Treasure Island. But I came home safely to tell my tale because that salty pirate had a wee bit of good in him and saved my life. I still wonder what happened to him when he made his escape with a bag of gold. (If you want to know how close to death I came, you’ll have to read the book.)

As a young man I had everything going for me. I was named captain of my own ship. My beautiful fiancé awaited my return from sea. I wasn’t born rich but I was finally poised to do well for my family and myself. But the night before my wedding, three men I trusted betrayed me. Due to their treachery, everything I held dear was wrenched from me. I was arrested and sent to the dreaded island prison, Chateau d’If, where I spent fourteen years plotting my revenge. My daring escape would take your breath away – it did mine – and was the stuff of legends. I can’t tell you how rich I became by following the map given to me by a fellow inmate. Did I achieve my revenge? (You have to read the Count of Monte Cristo to find out.)

I’ve escaped death and been chased by beautiful women, from Siberia to Afghanistan to Morocco to Jamaica, in service of the Queen. (Along with James Bond, I had a license to kill.) I’ve quietly maneuvered behind the scenes of the Cold War against a brutal, amoral (and suddenly human) KGB director named Karla. (Smiley and I knew how to play the long game and finally, ultimately reel him in.) I’ve hunted terrorists. I’ve climbed Mt. Everest. I’ve hunted a murderous whale. I’ve solved crimes. I’ve fought with and against the Romans.

My dangerous life started so early, I can barely remember a time in my life that wasn’t filled with danger, intrigue, and fighting—and winning—against all odds. I once killed a giant with a slingshot and smooth stone when reading a Bible Story book. I still remember my life as a priest when I built the breathtaking cathedral of Kingsbridge in Pillars of the Earth. I defended the Motherland when Napoleon brought his army to Moscow in War and Peace. (Though my life in court is a 2000-word blur.) After years of futility, I finally put Edinburgh’s most notorious criminal, Big Ger Cafferty in prison, only to see the son-of-a-gun get an early release. After he helped me solve a case, the old rumors that I was on his payroll the whole time resurfaced. (Only Ian Rankin knows if Rebus was a dirty cop or not.)

One of the most popular authors of our day, George R.R. Martin, was writing of me—I’m sure of it—when he said: “A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies. The man who never reads lives only one.”

Are you a reader? I’m guessing you could tell a thousand tales of betrayal and redemption as well.

 

Mark “M.K.” Gilroy is a veteran publishing executive who has acquired, developed, authored, and ghostwritten hundreds of books. He is the author of the Kristen Conner Mystery Series – Cuts Like a Knife, Every Breath You Take, and Cold As Ice.

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Filed Under: Books, Creativity Tagged With: count of monte cristo, george r.r. martin, james bond, treasure island

Mark Gilroy November 23, 2015

The Power of Personal Perspective

the power of personal perspective

What do you see when you look at your life?

The power of personal perspective can literally change your world.

Easier said when everything in life is going your way.

Don’t get me wrong. I recognize that the events, conditions, and relationships we experience are very real, both good and bad. Life happens and it’s not just our response to external dynamics that defines our existence.

I finally agree with something you said.

But what some would consider to be nothing more than  bromide is still true: Our response to what happens in life is just as – or even more – important than what happens to us.

Tell that to people who are used and abused in our world. Or is this one more way to keep them pacified?

You’ve seen the evidence yourself. Two people experience the same thing, but have a very different experience based on perception.

Very simplistic thinking.

Auschwitz and Dachau survivor, founder of logotherapy (the Third Viennese School of Psychotherapy), and author of Man’s Search for Meaning and other classic works, Viktor Frankl, made this brilliant and challenging observation:

Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.

Frankl was subjected to slave labor and lost his wife, brother, and parents to the death camps. As a psychiatrist enduring the most inhumane of conditions, his seminal observation was that those with meaning survive; those without hope or purpose don’t survive. For Frankl, therapy – overcoming, growing, surviving, thriving – was a matter of finding meaning in even in the most absurd and painful of situations.

Finding meaning is a perception adjustment that chooses hope over despair; freedom over slavery; victory over victimhood.

I believe that Viktor Frankl is needed now more than ever. Our culture and individual perceptions have been hijacked by a philosophy of helplessness and hopelessness that teaches us to define the quality of our life by circumstances, not by our choices.

In that space between stimulus and response have you bought into a philosophy of victimhood or personal empowerment? What do you see when you look at your life? Is the power of personal perspective in your life a positive or negative force?

Perspective is choosing a vision. Vision is not just seeing what is in front of us but also what can be. In the classic self book written by James Allen in 1903, As  A Man Thinketh, he opens with this little poem about disciplining our mind to see the life we dream of.

Mind is the Master power that moulds and makes,

And Man is Mind, and evermore he takes

The tool of Thought, and, shaping what he wills,

Brings forth a thousand joys, a thousand ills:

—He thinks in secret, and it comes to pass:

Environment is but his looking-glass.

 

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Filed Under: Culture, Life Observations, Motivation Tagged With: As a Man Thinketh, James Allen, Man's Search for meaning, personal perspective, Viktor Frankl

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Mark is a publisher, author, consultant, blogger, positive thinker, believer, encourager, and family guy. A resident of Brentwood, Tennessee, he has six kids, with one in college and five out in the "real world." Read More…

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