Joerg H. Trauboth (Wikipedia) was born just outside of Berlin in 1943 during an air-raid. He discovered his love for writing early in his career as an officer and was awarded top honors by the General Inspector of the German Bundeswehr. Along the way, he flew over two thousand flight hours as a Weapons Systems Officer and instructor in the Phantom RF4E (in which he survived two critical lightening strikes). After a training in George AFB (CA), Major Joerg H. Trauboth flew the Phantom F4F and finally – followed by another conversion training in Cottesmore (UK) – the Tornado aircrafts. Trauboth became a General Staff Officer in the Military Academy of the German Armed Forces in Hamburg-Blankenese and enrolled as LtCol in the NATO Defense College in Rome. He has served in the German national operational headquarters as well as in the NATO Headquarters in Brussels as the German representative in the areas of Crisis Management, Operations, and Intelligence.
At the age of fifty, he retired early from his post as a Colonel in the German Air Force to become a Special Risk Consultant at the Control Risk Group in London. He was trained and engaged in negotiating extortion and kidnapping situations in South America and Eastern Europe.
The former Colonel, eager to start making money on his own soon founded the Trauboth Risk Management company. He received a startup award and quickly made a reputation for himself internationally as an top-notch crisis manager in Europe. During his time as CEO, he conceptualized crisis prevention strategies for a number of European companies and employed a 24-hour task force to protect them from product tampering, product recalls, kidnappings, and image crises. He was also a co-founder and the first president of the European Crisis Management Academy in Vienna and wrote a standard reference book on the subject of crisis management for companies at risk of threat.
Today Joerg H. Trauboth is an author, filmmaker with more than 75.000 youtube clicks, and an enthusiastic Grumman Tiger pilot. (See this latest night flight-video here. And if you want to know who his favorite Co-Pilot is, have a look here.) The crisis manager and active pilot has served as the European Director and President of the US – based international American Yankee Pilots Organization.
His advice on crisis management is continually sought after and he is present as expert in radio and television interviews regarding his opinion on international crisis situations.
Joerg H. Trauboth has been 53 years married with Martina. They have two sons, three grandchildren, and both live near Bonn, Germany. In addition, Trauboth voluntarily contributes his expertise to the Crisis Invention Team of the German Federal Foreign Office in Bonn and reads from his fiction and non fiction books on readers’ tours followed by discussions with his readers about the dramatically changing world.
Joerg’s latest book is the thriller, Three Brothers.
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Kusch Mountains under a barrage of heavy fire from the Taliban. However, their next mission – in Northern Iraq – to save two German hostages taken captive by the Islamic State, also known as ISIS, ends in disaster for the three brothers in arms. The perfectly laid-out strategy of
The devoted commando brothers decide to leave the KSK and start a new career together as security advisors with a family-owned company based in Cologne. But the terrorist activities of ISIS continue to determine their fate. The brothers are faced with one of their greatest challenges when ISIS kidnaps company heir Johannes Ericson and his partner Karina Marie. Moreover, the terrorists demand a ransom and extort the German government to immediately suspend its military intervention in the fight against ISIS. It is a race against time to save the couple from assassination.
Joerg H. Trauboth has written more than just an exhilarating novel. Three Brothers unites the current omnipresent threat of terrorism with the author’s first-hand experience as a crisis manager and a military and terrorism expert. The result is an unrivaled political thriller. In this gripping novel, Trauboth foretells possible scenarios for our society in light of the rise of radical Islamic terrorism. Read the full chapter 1 here …
Three Brothers is the English translation of the successful German thriller Drei Brüder (ratio-books), highly appreciated by thousands of readers, as well as military organizations and government officials alike. Jörg H. Trauboth’s storytelling skills can be compared to those of Tom Clancy and similar authors as James Patterson. The German version of the novel will also soon be available as an audio book.
Drei Brüder has been translated into English by (US native) Leanne Cvetan.
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We welcome you to My
Bookish Pleasures! Can you tell us how you got started writing fiction?
Typically, I am not, at least I
thought, a fiction writer. How could I be as an ex-soldier, business consultant
and checklist-minded pilot? After my retirement as a Colonel of the German Air
Force and at the age of fifty, I started a career as a security-related Crisis
Management Consultant. My clients wanted to know more specifically about the
“right” response to kidnapping and extortion. A well-known German publisher
invited me to write a non-fiction book about Crisis Management. That was quite
easy for me as a new author since prevention and response was my daily
business. In 2001, the book became a standard source of information for all
companies and persons who find it wise to be prepared; to think the
unthinkable. In 2017, I developed that book further together with 5 other
authors and it’s now used as standard lecture material in businesses and
universities, but not is projected for translation.
In that time, I was consulting a
family whose daughter and partner were kidnapped from a sailing boat in the Philippines
by the terrorist organization Aba Sayyaf. The couple was held captive for six
months and survived unbelievable physical and psychological pain. Her family
did as well since they received almost no information about the negotiation
process from the German government. Normally, a
professional kidnapping consultant aids and assists the family regarding the
police, the media, and negotiations for 4-6 weeks before being relieved by
another consultant to allow them to recover also from their own emotions. The
family insisted that I stay and I agreed. I couldn’t leave the lovely 81 years
old mother alone in her grief. And also, because my ethical standards as a
social crisis counsellor for the church in my hometown of Bonn, Germany made it imperative that I stay with the
family.
I felt okay emotionally, but I
also did something new this time which helped me to create more distance to the
case. As a kind of self-assessment, I started writing a political kidnapping
thriller but incorporated only a few details of the real case. I created my own
heroes and, 570 pages later, my readers deemed the story an “incredible
page-turner.” Between the lines the reader learns about
managing a kidnapping case which is often a dirty, and always a dangerous
business of “life for money,” about the brutal terrorist organization ISIS, and the difficult governmental crisis
management surrounding the official policy of not paying extortion ransoms.
Seventy percent of the drama in Three
Brothers directly stems from my life experience, the rest is fiction. After
that, I felt much, much better. And last but not least: the couple was released
and I will never forget how the mother embraced her daughter upon her arrival
at the Frankfurt airport after suddenly appearing through a
secret door. I sat down and continued to write, sometimes day and night.
Describe your writing
process. Do you plot or write by the seat of your pants? When and where do you
write?
Writing by the seat of my pants?
Not really. I am not an author who just sits down and starts without some
minimum preparation. I have to know in advance for whom
I am writing. Who should read this book? Young or old, men, women, only
thriller enthusiasts, Americans, English, Germans, French, etc.? This last
point is very important due to the cultural differences. The typical patriotic
thinking of the U.S. can be counterproductive in other countries
and even turn the reader off.
So,
I create a plot, develop my protagonists, and I let them change. Otherwise, it
could get boring. I take them with me to bed, I speak with them. Sometimes they
annoy me. I have a picture of each character and try to project that picture
into words. I decide who the good and bad guys will be. And I try to keep the
tension from the first to the last page. I like to work with cliffhangers and
surprises and stay logical, otherwise I will end up losing the reader.
I
am a detail freak but force myself not to divulge everything, I like to leave
room the readers’ imagination. Also, I work with emotions but try to minimize
clichés. The book should have the potential for a second reading even after you
know the end. I decide relatively early whether the book ends positively or
negatively. Three Brothers ends
positively and the reader closes the book, hopefully, with a peaceful feeling.
That’s my plan or it is what I wish happens. Would anyone recommend a book that
ends in disaster?
I
adjust my wording to the scenery. In the
romantic parts, the words are soft and match the backdrop or the general
feeling. In a shooting or crisis situation, the sentences are short like the
shots of a bullet. Sometimes I speak out loud and record a page and listen to
my written words. At the latest, once your book has become an audio book is
when you become very aware of what you have written.
Last,
but not least: I don’t think too much
about moneymaking during writing. I contend with my book for as long as I feel
it is necessary. Unfortunately, a book never stops in your head, but when you
feel the baby is ready to be born, you have to let it go.
Can you tell us about your most
recent release “Three Brothers”?
Three Brothers is first political thriller of this genre in Germany.
But it is not one of the typical Navy Seals thriller with a lot of shouting
throughout the book. At its core, it is a fictional book about three young
people finding their way to themselves.
Marc Anderson and his two
commando brothers Thomas and Tim are highly respected elite soldiers in the
secretive German Commando Special Forces, the KSK. Together with the American
Navy Seals, they successfully rescue the crew of a downed American F-15
tactical fighter jet in the Hindu Kusch
Mountains under a barrage of heavy
fire from the Taliban. However, their next mission – in Northern
Iraq – to save two German hostages taken captive by the Islamic
State, also known as ISIS, ends in disaster for the three brothers in arms. The
perfectly laid-out strategy of Operation Eagle is betrayed,
causes Marc, Thomas, and Tim to narrowly escape death. The German Federal
Criminal Police Office (BKA) starts the hunt for the informant. The devoted
commando brothers decide to leave the KSK and start a new career together as
security advisors with a family-owned company based in Cologne.
But the terrorist activities of ISIS continue to determine
their fate. The brothers are faced with one of their greatest challenges when ISIS
kidnaps company heir Johannes Ericson and his partner Karina Marie. Moreover,
the terrorists demand a ransom and extort the German government to immediately
suspend its military intervention in the fight against ISIS.
It is a race against time to save the couple from assassination.
The primary aim of this book was
to create a page-turner for all kind of readers, not only for military-minded
people. My wife said to one sex scene: “enough is enough.” My twenty-year-old grandson, however,
remarked about the same part: “Grandpa, it was a bit short…”
It is not easy to satisfy
everyone and a writer shouldn’t try; the risk of losing the own style is too
great.
The secondary aim of the book was
to let the readers indirectly learn about what goes on during a kidnapping, how
to overcome one’s fear, what governments and NATO can do, and to describe
possible scenarios for our society in light of the rise of radical Islamic terrorism.
Unfortunately, several of the scenarios have become already true.
How did you get the idea for
the book?
It stemmed partly from a need
to process the emotional experiences I have witnessed in assisting the families
of kidnapping victims.
Of all your characters, which
one is your favorite? Why?
My favorite is the (fictional!)
German Chancellor. She is strong, educated, beautiful, and is having a private
affair with the Minister of Defense. She takes on a huge responsibility by
allowing the elite soldiers to go unauthorized by parliament into Iraq and
the result causes a political crisis. The real German chancellor has received
and obviously enjoyed the book as have several other ministers and high
generals. I am pleased about their positive feedback. From my cases, I am
familiar with the crisis management location and key persons in Berlin, and I
think Berlin
appreciates that the heavy burden of a political kidnapping and extortion is
displayed in respectful reality in a thriller by a former German Air Force
colonel.
What was the most challenging
aspect of writing your book?
To write a page-turner with the
potential of becoming an international bestseller. No more and no less.
What projects are you currently
working on?
There will be a follow-up political
thriller with my main protagonist Marc Anderson. But this time, the story will
start in the White House. The plot is set, writing will start in September, and
it will be published next year.
What advice would you offer to
new or aspiring fiction authors?
1.
Have clear plan for your book
(plot, characters, logic, ending)
2.
Write an exposé for publishers
/ agents.
3.
Don’t be frustrated by a no or
negative answers. There are a great many alternative options for you
4.
Learn all about social media
marketing and start your book marketing - as with Pump Up Your Book! –
preferably short before publishing
5.
Believe in your success - as I
do just in approaching the US
market.
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