
|
I write to entertain my readers and myself, although unintentionally hide my outrageous philosophy behind the fast paced action. All my novels start with the creation of a character. Then I set his/her destiny, and drop him/her into realistic surroundings even if the story is a science fiction, taking place in the future or at a distant galaxy. From here on, I just guide my characters through their obstacle course to the end. Strangely, my heroes or heroines relate to the setting of the novels much better than I do. This is understandable, as I write in the early two thousands and they usually live in the nineteen hundreds, or in the late twenty-first century. Although I admire the style and the writings of John Masters, Nicholas Monsarrat, Robert Ruark, and Jean-Pierre Hallet, I follow my own path to fame or oblivion. The destiny lies with you, the reader.
Gabriel Timar |


|
Born in Hungary in 1932, a cadet at the elite military school of Nagykaroly during World War II, Gabriel Timar studied civil engineering at the Budapest University. Taking active part in the 1956 revolution, he decided to defect to the West. In the United Kingdom he worked as a structural designer. Ten months later he immigrated to Canada and worked as an engineer. After seven years, he got his first contract in Asia. For the next twenty-odd years he worked in Africa, Asia and the South Pacific as consulting engineer, chief executive officer, United Nations environmental engineering advisor and finally as a professor. In 1982 he married, returned to Canada with his Hungarian wife, and taught environmental engineering at Seneca College in Toronto. In 1994 he retired as the Chair of the School of Civil and Resources Engineering Technology. All his life he enjoyed writing novels, articles, and plays both in English and Hungarian. From 1997 he regularly contributed articles to Kanadai Magyarság, the largest North American Hungarian language weekly under the pseudonym Gabor Bendeguz. In 2000, his first Hungarian language novel, A Bardán kapcsolat was nominated for the Zsoldos award, recognizing the year’s best Hungarian sci-fi. In 2004, his first English language novel, Hades Connection, another sci-fi was published in the USA. To date he published seventeen novels. He also wrote several manuals and college textbooks published by the Province of Ontario, Seneca College, United Nations and the University of Malawi. |