Marty Soderstrom | |
Pseudonym: | Jack Soren, Martin R. Soderstrom |
Birth Name: | Martin Richard Soderstrom |
Birth Date: | 7 September 1962 |
Birth Place: | Toronto, Canada |
Occupation: | Novelist |
Genre: | Action-adventure, Action-thriller, Adventure, Mystery, Techno-thriller |
Portaldisp: | yes |
Jack Soren is the pen name of Canadian writer Martin Richard Soderstrom, a writer of action-adventure/thriller novels. He was born and raised in Toronto, Canada, and is now a resident of Oshawa, Canada.
Under the name Martin R. Soderstrom, he has published horror and science fiction short stories.[1]
Soderstrom's father was a salesman, and his mother was a part-time bookkeeper for a local law firm. He had one younger brother. The family lived in the Toronto suburbs in a detached brick house with a large backyard.
He attended Anson Park Public School and then R.H. King Collegiate Institute. He went on to study Journalism at Centennial College in Toronto.
Soderstrom sold his first novel, The Monarch (2014), under the pen name of Jack Soren to HarperCollins. The novel was picked out of the slush pile for the new imprint, Witness Impulse. Soren's editor asked him to turn the standalone thriller into a series. With The Tomorrow Heist (2015) the two books became The Monarch Series.
The digital edition of The Monarch was published in December 2014 and the Trade Paperback edition came out in January 2015. The book was translated and published in Germany, Japan, France, and the Netherlands.
In June 2015, The Monarch was short-listed for the Kobo Emerging Writer Prize.[2]
The Monarch Series follows international art thief Johnathan Hall. In the first book in the series, The Monarch (2014), Hall is pulled back from retirement after mutilated bodies of New York's elite are found, carved with The Monarch's signature symbol. In the following novel, The Tomorrow Heist (2015), international art thieves Jonathan Hall and Lew Katchbrow join a shadowy organization which leads them to discover the truth behind Ashita, a futuristic city in the depths of the Pacific Ocean.