About...
Michael Sears was born in Johannesburg, and grew
up in Cape Town and Nairobi, Kenya. In the worst of the
apartheid era, his family emigrated to Australia, where he
completed a doctorate in dynamical systems. But Africa drew
him back in 1972, and he accepted a position at the
university in Johannesburg where he specialized in
applications of mathematics in a variety of areas including
image analysis and ecological modeling. This led to many
fascinating projects, one of which involved radio-tracking
hunting lions through the Botswana night. Another was a
system model for the Kalahari Gemsbok National Park.
While Dean of the Faculty of Science at the University, he
focused on working with black students and encouraging them
into science careers. This period also enabled him to make
contacts with the historically black Southern African
universities.
In 1997 he accepted a position managing remote sensing at
Anglo American, a major international mining house. Its
associate – the diamond giant De Beers – has extensive
interests in Botswana through the Debswana joint venture
with the government. The mining and exploration threads in
the book draw on experiences gained in this context.
While Michael Sears has traveled widely in Southern and
Central Africa, Botswana, with its magnificent conservation
areas, dramatic scenery, and varied peoples, has always been
a special favorite of his. Although he still lives in
Johannesburg, his mind is often in the African Bush, and the
rest of him follows as often as possible. He has long-held
an ambition to capture the flavor of the country on the
canvass of a novel. And now, along with coauthor Trollip,
Sears has done just that in A CARRION
DEATH: A DETECTIVE KUBU MYSTERY, his first work of fiction.

Stanley Trollip was born in Johannesburg where he was schooled
from childhood to his university degree in Statistics. His undergraduate
time was checkered, taking twice as long as usual, mainly due to
participation in a variety of sports (cricket, rugby, and field hockey),
editing the student newspaper, and involvement in the anti-apartheid
movement. In 1971, he attended the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
where he received a PhD in Educational Psychology, with an emphasis on how
computers could facilitate teaching and learning. Since 1976 he has been a
professor or a consultant and was until recently Director of Learning
Strategies at Capella University, an on-line University. These studies lead
to a book project; Trollip co-authored a very successful textbook:
Multimedia for Learning: Methods and Development (Allyn and Bacon).
Trollip, who holds a variety of pilot’s licenses, lectures frequently on the
topic of aviation safety. He co-authored one book on the subject, Human
Factors for General Aviation (Jeppesen) and was principal author on several
others for Transportation Canada, all published without attribution.
With coauthor Michael Sears, Trollip has enjoyed flying safaris to Botswana
and Zimbabwe. They have had many adventures together, including tracking
lions at night, fighting bush fires on the Savuti plains in northern
Botswana, being charged by an elephant, and having their plane’s door pop
open over the Kalahari, scattering their navigation maps over the desert.
These wonderful times have fed his love for the bush, as well as for
Botswana.
Stanley Trollip, still an active small-plane pilot and now nearly a
full-time writer, is currently learning to paraglide. He divides his time
between South Africa and Minneapolis, Minnesota. Trollip is currently busily
at work with Sears on their second Detective Kubu novel.

Awards and Special Recognition...
A CARRION DEATH
Barnes & Noble “Discover Great New Writers” Selection
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