Justin Scott (writer)

Justin Scott, is an Americal novelist. Scott sometimes uses the pseudonyms Paul Garrison and J. S. Blazer.

Justin Scott
BornManhattan, New York City, New York, U.S.
Pen namePaul Garrison, J. S. Blazer
OccupationNovelist
NationalityAmerican
Period1973–present
GenreAdventure
Website
www.justinscott-paulgarrison.com

Early life

Scott was born in Manhattan, New York City, New York, U.S. Scott's father was A. Leslie Scott, a novelist. Scott's mother, Lily K. Scott, was also a novelist. Scott grew up on Long Island's Great South Bay. His sister, Alison Scott Skelton, is also a novelist.[1]

Career

Scott has written fourteen books under his own name, including the Ben Abbott Mystery series. He has written seven books under the pseudonym Paul Garrison and two under the pseudonym J. S. Blazer. He has coauthored ten books with Clive Cussler. These are the Isaac Bell series.[2][3][4][5][6]

Bibliography

Books authored solely by Justin Scott

Title Publication Date
Many Happy Returns 1973
Treasure for Treasure 1974
The Shipkiller 1978
The Turning 1978
Normandie Triangle 1981
A Pride of Royals 1983
Rampage 1985
The Auction 1985
The Widow of Desire 1989
The Nine Dragons 1991
The Empty Eye of the Sea 1993
HardScape (Ben Abbott #1) 1994
Treasure Island: A Modern Novel 1994
StoneDust (Ben Abbott #2) 1996
Frostline (Ben Abbott #3) 1997[7]
McMansion (Ben Abbott #4) 2007[8]
Mausoleum (Ben Abbott #5) 2007[9]

Under pen name Paul Garrison

Title Publication Date
Fire and Ice 1998[10]
Red Sky at Morning 2000[11]
Buried at Sea 2002 [12]
Sea Hunter 2003[13]
The Ripple Effect 2004
The Janson Command 2012
The Janson Option 2014

Under pen name J. S. Blazer

Title Publication Date
Deal Me out 1973[14]
Lend A Hand 1975[15]

Books written with Clive Cussler

Title Publication Date
The Wrecker 2009
The Spy 2010
The Race 2011
The Thief 2012
The Striker 2013
The Bootlegger 2014
The Assassin 2015
The Gangster 2016
The Cutthroat 2017

Reference[16]

gollark: Also, non-modern-western moral systems exist.
gollark: Are the same thing, as far as I know? It's like saying "C++ is simply a more developed version of C so technically we could say that C and C++ are equivalent".
gollark: That's not how equality works.
gollark: I am currently an atheist due to not having any good reason to believe anything else.
gollark: Not particularly. If you prevent everyone from learning maths, you'll run out of engineers and such, which would cause problems as you need them to make good yachts.

References

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