William Allen Harbinson, who writes under the name W. A. Harbinson, is a British author. He is most well known for his Projekt Saucer five-volume series of science fiction novels. He also writes war novels, many with a special forces theme, under the pseudonym Shaun Clarke.
Biography
W. A. Harbinson was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland in 1941. He went to live in England at 17, then emigrated to Australia at 19, serving for six years in the Royal Australian Air Force. Returning to England, he lived in London for twenty years, spent a few years in Paris, but now lives in West Cork, Ireland. Harbinson began his literary career with a series of potboiler paperbacks published in Sydney, Australia, between 1967–69. His first serious novel, published when he had left Australia and settled in London, was a World War II story, Instruments of Death. Being a paperback original, the novel received few reviews, though on the cover of the US edition, best-selling novelist Robin Moore hailed it as, "The greatest war novel since Norman Mailer's The Naked and the Dead". This was followed by an avant-garde novel, Knock, described in the foreword by Colin Wilson as a work that "belongs to an Irish tradition that runs from Charles Lever and Samuel Lover, down through Joyce, Beckett and Donleavy". Harbinson then proceeded to write in a more commercial vein. He is the author of over fifty novels, including his best-selling high tech/science fiction thriller epics, Genesis and Revelation. The original Genesis was then used as the basis for his 5-volume "Projekt Saucer" series, which includes, in sequence, Inception, Phoenix, Genesis, Millennium and Resurrection, all published in Great Britain by New English Library. Though the series remained in print for most of the 1990s, only volumes 1 and 3 were published in the United States. A Spanish-language edition of Genesis was published by Circulo de Lectores in 2004. Harbinson’s decade of UFO research for the "Projekt Saucer" series was used as the basis for his non-fiction book, Projeckt UFO: The Case for Man-Made Flying Saucers, published in hardback and paperback by Boxtree, London, in 1996. Harbinson then launched Bloomsbury Books’ series of "22 Books" SAS novels, writing twelve books for the series under the pen-name of Shaun Clarke; he then went on to a separate, successful career as an SAS thriller writer, producing novels for Hodder Headline and Simon & Schuster. Harbinson is also the author of various biographical works, including a US number 1, million-selling biography of Elvis Presley, plus biographies of Charles Bronson, George C Scott, Klaus & Nastassja Kinski, and Evita Peron. The latter reached the number 6 position in The Times ‘Top Ten Movie and TV Tie-ins’ listing of October 1996. It was also published by St. Martin’s Press, New York. In 2005, Harbinson self-published his autobiography, The Writing Game: Recollections of an Occasional Bestselling Author, as a POD book, later as a Kindle e-book, released through Amazon's CreateSpace. This was followed by his travel memoir, All at Sea on the Ghost Ship, also released as both a POD book and Kindle e-book. Since then, he has republished most of his best-known works as both POD books and Kindle e-books. Harbinson’s early Australian novel, The Running Man, was turned into a feature film entitled The City's Edge. His work for radio includes the science fiction play, Astronaut, broadcast by the BBC in 1975, and a short story, Father and Son, broadcast by BBC Ulster in 1999.
Novels
Writing as W. A. Harbinson. Projeckt Saucer series