Jeremy Duns
British journalist and author

Jeremy Duns

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British journalist and author
Gender:
Male
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Birth:
10 December 1973
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Biography

Introduction

Jeremy Duns (born 10 December 1973) is a British author of spy fiction. Born in Manchester, he now resides in the Åland Islands.

Life and career

Duns studied at St Catherine's College, Oxford, after which he worked for several years as a journalist at Brussels-based magazine The Bulletin. In Britain, he has written for The Sunday Times, The Daily Telegraph and The Independent newspapers. He is an admirer of Ian Fleming and James Bond, and has unearthed pages of a lost Bond novel, Per Fine Ounce, early screenplays for Casino Royale and The Diamond Smugglers', and researched a wartime MI6 operation that inspired the opening of the film Goldfinger.

Duns writes spy fiction featuring an MI6 agent called Paul Dark, set during the Cold War. Duns's novels are influenced by Fleming, Len Deighton and John le Carré; his debut novel, Free Agent (2009), was one of the Telegraph's "thrillers of the year" in 2009. The BBC optioned the television rights to the Paul Dark series in 2009, although Duns's own website notes that the option has since lapsed.

He is a member of International Thriller Writers and the Crime Writers' Association.

Duns lived in Stockholm, Sweden from 2004, and subsequently moved to the Åland Islands of Finland.

Stance on plagiarism and sockpuppetry

Duns has criticised other authors for plagiarism. In 2011, he praised debut spy novel Assassin of Secrets by Q.R. Markham, but after reading an allegation that a scene in the novel was plagiarised, investigated further and discovered that large sections of the novel had been plagiarised. He informed the British publisher, Hodder, and the book was pulled by Hodder and US publisher Little, Brown and Company. In 2012, he discovered that novelist R. J. Ellory had written positive reviews of his own books while responding negatively to rivals, on the Amazon website, via the use of sock puppets. Ellory admitted he had done this, and apologised for it. Duns has also examined methods used by British author Stephen Leather since his admission in 2012 that he uses a network of sockpuppets to promote his own work online. Duns has also alleged that Leather has harassed him online in retaliation.

In 2012 Duns helped organise an open letter signed by over 50 authors condemning the use by certain authors of sockpuppets, fake reviews and other deceptive marketing techniques.