Alex Scarrow
Alex Scarrow (born 14 February 1966) is a British author specializing in science fiction, thrillers, and young adult novels, best known for his bestselling TimeRiders series.[1][2] Before becoming a full-time writer, Scarrow worked as a rock guitarist in various bands for about a decade and later spent twelve years in the computer games industry as a graphic artist and lead designer.[3][2] He published his debut adult novel, A Thousand Suns, in 2006 with Orion Books, marking the start of a prolific career that includes five adult thrillers and numerous young adult titles with publishers such as Puffin and Macmillan.[2][4] The TimeRiders series, a young adult science fiction saga about time-traveling agents preventing historical alterations, spans ten books from 2010 to 2014 and has been translated into over 30 languages, earning awards including the RedHouse Children's Book Award and the Hampshire Book Award.[2][5] Other notable works include the dystopian Plagueland trilogy (2016–2018), the survival thriller Last Light (2007), which was adapted into a 2022 Peacock miniseries,[6] and the ongoing DCI Bill Boyd crime thriller series, beginning with Silent Tide in 2021.[7][4] Scarrow continues to write across genres while contributing to projects like the Doctor Who: Thirteen Doctors, 13 Stories anthology in 2019.[3][8]Early life and education
Childhood and family
Alex Scarrow was born on 14 February 1966 in Hertford, Hertfordshire, England. He is the younger brother of historical novelist Simon Scarrow, and the two have occasionally collaborated on literary events.[9][10][1] Scarrow grew up in the Bahamas, where his early environment shaped his imaginative tendencies. His family background included exposure to creative pursuits, though specific details on his parents' occupations remain limited in public records. In interviews, he has noted that his youthful ambition to become a rock guitarist strained his parents, contributing to an early home life centered around music and artistic experimentation.[11]Schooling and early interests
Alex Scarrow experienced a peripatetic childhood, shaped by his parents' expatriate lifestyle, with school terms spent in England and holidays abroad in locations where his family was based. This transient existence fostered an insular and observant personality in the young Scarrow, as he often found himself on the periphery of social groups, which later influenced his approach to character development and storytelling in his writing.[9] His formal education began to reveal creative inclinations early on. During primary school at around age seven, Scarrow wrote a detailed story for a homework assignment based on a National Geographic image of a man with husky dogs in a snowy tundra, filling two exercise books and igniting his passion for narrative creation. He completed secondary schooling primarily in England, where he was an average student but showed promise in English through his writing endeavors; his interests extended to art, leading him to pursue a foundation course in the subject after leaving school, though he ultimately received the lowest possible grade (U) due to a lack of focus. He later enrolled in a Higher National Diploma (HND) in computing but dropped out after the first term.[9][11] Scarrow's early hobbies centered on imaginative pursuits that foreshadowed his future career. He immersed himself in science fiction, drawing inspiration from British comics like 2000 AD and television programs of the era, which fueled his fascination with speculative worlds and time travel concepts. Self-taught on the guitar, he developed a strong interest in rock music during his teenage years, dreaming of stardom in the music industry amid the vibrant pop culture of the 1970s and 1980s; this passion was encouraged by his family, including his brother Simon Scarrow, who later became a fellow author. Additionally, Scarrow enjoyed drawing and crafting stories, activities that honed his visual and narrative skills before transitioning to professional creative fields.[12][9]Pre-writing career
Music industry roles
Following his education, Alex Scarrow dedicated approximately 10 years of his professional life, in the late 1980s and early 1990s, to pursuing a career as a rock guitarist in the music industry. He joined and performed with various unsuccessful bands, focusing on live performances and efforts to secure recording contracts.[13][9] Scarrow's experiences in this period involved extensive gigging across local venues, participating in auditions, and navigating the competitive landscape of the British music scene during the late 1980s and early 1990s. Despite persistent attempts to land a record deal, his bands never achieved commercial success, and no official recordings were produced, highlighting the precarious and often unforgiving nature of aspiring to rock stardom at the time.[9][2] By his mid-twenties, Scarrow grew disillusioned with the instability and diminishing opportunities in the music business, recognizing that the typical career window for musicians was closing. This burnout from the unrelenting pursuit of elusive breakthroughs prompted his exit from the industry in the mid-1990s, leading him to leverage his artistic skills toward graphic design roles.[9]Video game design contributions
In the mid-1990s, Alex Scarrow transitioned from the music industry to graphic arts, leveraging his artistic skills to enter the computer games sector as a designer and artist. His career in video games spanned approximately 12 years during the main period from around 1995 to the mid-2000s, during which he contributed to various studios including Intelligent Games, Computer Artworks, and Slitherine Software, with select later projects including remasters as of 2024. This shift marked a pivotal move into digital media, where he honed technical and creative abilities in a rapidly evolving industry.[14][15][3] Scarrow's key projects showcased his versatility in art and design, particularly in sci-fi and historical settings. He provided 3D art and additional game design for Evolva (2000), a third-person action game developed by Computer Artworks, where players controlled genetically mutable creatures in an alien environment. For The Thing (2002), also from Computer Artworks, he contributed additional game design and later level design in its 2024 remaster, adapting the horror elements of John Carpenter's film into interactive survival mechanics. His work extended to historical strategy titles like Spartan (2004), Gates of Troy (2004), and Legion Arena (2005), all developed by Slitherine Software, where he handled 3D art to visualize ancient Greek and Roman battles. Earlier contributions included art for Waterworld (1997) at Intelligent Games, a real-time strategy game based on the post-apocalyptic film, and the Ultimate Soccer Manager series, such as Ultimate Soccer Manager 98 (1998) from Impressions Games, focusing on sports simulation interfaces. Other notable credits include artwork for The History Channel: Great Battles of Rome (2007) and multiplayer map design for the Command & Conquer: Remastered Collection (2020). These roles involved creating concept art, user interface elements, level graphics, and multiplayer maps, emphasizing visual storytelling in fast-paced development cycles.[15][16][17][18][19][20][21] The demanding environment of the games industry profoundly shaped Scarrow's creative approach, fostering skills in concise narrative delivery through visuals and interactive elements that later informed his writing. He has noted that the fast-paced nature of game development required quick adaptation and visual storytelling, qualities that enhanced his ability to craft engaging plots in his novels. For instance, techniques from designing addictive gameplay loops directly influenced his young adult series, making stories more dynamic and appealing to readers accustomed to interactive media.[11][22][12]Literary career
Transition to authorship
In the mid-2000s, while employed as a lead game designer in the computer industry, Alex Scarrow sought a more expansive creative outlet beyond the commercial constraints of gaming, where many of his ambitious concepts remained undeveloped. Leveraging narrative skills honed through video game design, he began writing screenplays during downtime from projects like The Thing and Legion Arena.[23][5] Facing significant barriers to entry in the film industry, Scarrow adapted one of his strongest screenplays—a thriller centered on a near-miss Nazi atomic bomb project in 1945—into his debut novel, A Thousand Suns, published by Orion Books in 2006. This adaptation marked his entry into professional publishing, securing a book deal in 2005 through an agent and leading to further contracts for adult thrillers. The novel's success, praised for its cinematic pacing derived from its screenplay origins, enabled Scarrow to leave the games sector and commit to full-time authorship.[2][24][9] Scarrow's follow-up, Last Light (2007, Orion Books), established his voice in post-apocalyptic thrillers, exploring global collapse scenarios with the visual intensity influenced by his multimedia background. Early challenges included juggling demanding game development schedules with writing commitments, which contributed to his decision to exit the industry after the 2005 deal, amid frustrations with gaming's conservative sequel-driven model.[5][23][9]Adult thriller novels
Alex Scarrow's adult thriller novels, published primarily through Orion Books, explore themes of survival amid global crises, blending high-stakes action with speculative elements drawn from real-world anxieties such as resource depletion and historical what-ifs. His debut in this genre, A Thousand Suns (2006), presents an alternate history scenario set in the final days of World War II, where a secret Nazi surrender leads to a desperate Allied mission involving prototype nuclear technology and espionage across war-torn Europe. The narrative emphasizes human resilience against ideological fanaticism and technological peril, with protagonists navigating moral dilemmas in a race to avert catastrophe.[25] Scarrow's subsequent works, Last Light (2007) and its sequel Afterlight (2007), shift to near-future dystopias triggered by an abrupt global oil crisis, depicting societal collapse and individual struggles for survival in a world stripped of modern infrastructure. In Last Light, an oil engineer in Iraq and a family in England grapple with escalating chaos, from fuel shortages to violent unrest, highlighting themes of environmental vulnerability and the fragility of civilized order. Afterlight continues this exploration a decade later, focusing on isolated communities on decaying oil rigs fending off external threats, underscoring long-term adaptation to scarcity. These novels were optioned for film and television adaptation, reflecting their cinematic tension and broad appeal.[26][27][28][4] October Skies (2008) diverges into a historical thriller intertwined with contemporary mystery, as a modern hiker in Wyoming uncovers remnants of a doomed 1856 wagon train, revealing a tale of supernatural horror and human depravity amid frontier hardships like blizzards and isolation. Themes of inherited evil and the dark underbelly of pioneer expansion drive the dual-timeline plot, combining suspenseful pacing with atmospheric dread.[29] The Candle Man (2012) is a historical thriller linking the Jack the Ripper murders in 1888 London to events on the Titanic in 1912, where a survivor recounts his life story amid the ship's sinking, weaving themes of guilt, escape, and serial violence across time.[30] Critically, Scarrow's thrillers achieved bestseller status in the UK, praised for their relentless momentum and plausible speculative scenarios that provoke reflection on contemporary risks. Reviewers highlighted the gripping action and character-driven tension in Last Light, likening it to works by Frederick Forsyth for its intensity, though some noted predictable plot twists. Similarly, Afterlight was commended as a "moreish" follow-up with realistic dystopian elements, while A Thousand Suns earned acclaim as a "rip-roaring" adventure with well-rounded protagonists. October Skies received positive notices for its vivid historical immersion and chilling suspense, though occasional critiques pointed to uneven resolutions. The Candle Man was praised for its ingenious connection of historical events and taut suspense. Overall, these novels established Scarrow as a key voice in speculative thrillers, balancing entertainment with cautionary undertones.[4][31][32][33][34][35][30]Young adult science fiction series
Alex Scarrow has established himself in young adult science fiction through three major series that explore speculative futures, time manipulation, and survival challenges, primarily targeting readers aged 12 to 16. These works draw on his background in fast-paced thrillers to deliver high-stakes narratives with teen protagonists navigating extraordinary circumstances.[3] The TimeRiders series, comprising nine novels published between 2010 and 2014 by Puffin Books, follows a team of teenagers recruited by a secret agency to correct disruptions in the timeline caused by time travel. The inaugural book, TimeRiders (2010), introduces protagonists Liam O'Connor, Maddy Carter, and Sal Vikram, who are pulled from moments before their deaths in 1912, 2010, and 2026, respectively, to form the agency's New York-based unit in 1888. Subsequent installments, such as Day of the Predator (2010), The Doomsday Code (2011), and The Infinity Cage (2014), escalate the threats with historical anomalies involving dinosaurs, medieval prophecies, and future wars, emphasizing themes of historical alteration and the fragility of causality. The series became a bestseller, with positive reviews highlighting its gripping blend of action and educational historical elements, and it has been optioned for development as an animated TV series.[36][37][38] In the self-published Ellie Quin series, released digitally between 2013 and 2015 under Scarrow's Grr Books imprint, a young woman embarks on interstellar adventures in a colonized future universe. Beginning with The Legend of Ellie Quin (2013), the five-book arc centers on 19-year-old Ellie, who leaves her rural oxygen farm for the domed metropolis of New Haven, only to uncover secrets about her origins as a genetically engineered individual amid corporate intrigue and space travel. Books like The World According to Ellie Quin (2013), Beneath the Neon Sky (2013), Ellie Quin in Wonderland (2014), and Girl Reborn (2015) expand her journey across planets, grappling with identity, autonomy, and dystopian societal structures in a vibrant, expansive sci-fi setting. The series explores personal discovery and ethical dilemmas in biotechnology, appealing to fans of character-driven space opera.[39][40][41] The Remade trilogy, published by Macmillan Children's Books from 2016 to 2018, depicts a post-apocalyptic world ravaged by a sentient virus that liquefies human bodies, forcing survivors into isolated, medieval-like enclaves. Plague Land (2016) follows teen siblings Leon and Grace in rural England as they evade the plague and confront a community of "remade" outcasts, blending survival horror with historical regression. The sequels, Plague Nation (2017) and Plague World (2018), broaden the scope to global quarantines and viral evolution, delving into themes of pandemics, resilience, and human adaptability. Targeted at young adults, the series underscores the consequences of unchecked biological threats in a grounded yet speculative narrative.[42]DCI Boyd crime series
The DCI Boyd crime series marks Alex Scarrow's transition to contemporary police procedural fiction, centering on Detective Chief Inspector Bill Boyd, a widowed veteran detective recently transferred from London to the East Sussex CID in Hastings. The series follows Boyd and his team as they investigate a range of murders tied to the town's underbelly, blending gritty realism with intricate investigations that often uncover layers of local corruption, historical secrets, and the personal demons of the protagonists. Themes of institutional betrayal, community trauma, and ethical dilemmas in law enforcement recur throughout, drawing on Scarrow's prior experience in thriller writing to infuse the narratives with taut pacing and psychological depth.[5][43][44] Launched in 2021 with Silent Tide, the first installment self-published via Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing, the series quickly expanded due to strong reader engagement. By November 2025, it comprises 13 novels: Silent Tide (2021), Old Bones New Bones (2021), Burning Truth (2021), The Last Train (2021), The Safe Place (2022), Gone to Ground (2022), Argyle House (2022), The Lock Up (2023), The Archive (2023), A Monster Among Us (2024), The Vanishing (2024), The Fool (2025), and A Guardian Angel (2025). Each book presents a standalone case while advancing character arcs, such as Boyd's ongoing struggles with grief and team dynamics involving DS Samantha Okeke and DC Rory Minter. The plots typically revolve around seemingly isolated killings that reveal broader conspiracies, often incorporating Hastings' coastal and historical settings to heighten tension.[45][43][46][47] The series has garnered significant acclaim for its sharp plot twists, well-developed ensemble cast, and authentic portrayal of police work, amassing over 50,000 ratings on Goodreads with an average of 4.5 stars across the volumes as of November 2025. Readers and reviewers highlight the emotional resonance of Boyd's personal trauma alongside the procedural rigor, positioning it as a standout in British crime fiction. It has achieved bestseller status in the UK digital crime category on Amazon, reflecting Scarrow's versatility from earlier standalone thrillers into serialized storytelling.[47][45][48] The success of the DCI Boyd series enabled Scarrow to dedicate himself fully to writing following its 2021 debut, culminating in a prolific output that includes a 14th installment in progress as of late 2025. This shift solidified his reputation in the genre, with the self-published model allowing direct reader feedback to shape subsequent entries.[7][46][2]Personal life
Family and residence
Alex Scarrow has been married to Deborah Scarrow (also known as Debbie Chaffey) since the early 2000s.[4][49] He and Deborah have one son, Jacob, born in the late 1990s.[22] He is the younger brother of historical novelist Simon Scarrow.[50] As of 2025, there are no public reports of additional children.[51] The family resides in a rural home in the wilds of East Anglia, United Kingdom, which provides a secluded environment conducive to Scarrow's writing routine.[4] Scarrow and his family share their home with four dogs, including the springer spaniel Ozzie, whom they adopted in January 2017 from Spaniel Aid when he was approximately seven years old.[4][52]Interests and influences
Scarrow maintains a diverse set of hobbies that reflect his creative and adventurous background, including snowboarding, sailing, and composing music, activities he pursues in his spare time alongside regular walks with his Jack Russell terrier, Max.[2] His early career as a graphic artist has sustained an artistic inclination, allowing him to explore visual creativity outside of writing.[3] His literary influences draw heavily from science fiction and thriller genres, with Stephen King cited as a major impact for crafting believable characters, alongside Arthur C. Clarke and Douglas Adams for their imaginative storytelling in sci-fi.[24][40] Scarrow has also noted inspiration from classic sci-fi and thriller authors from two to three decades ago, shaping his blend of speculative and suspenseful narratives.[53] Environmental concerns play a notable role in Scarrow's personal interests, stemming from worries about peak oil and global ecological threats, which he has expressed as motivations for exploring such themes in his work.[54] In his daily routine, Scarrow typically begins writing sessions with a large cappuccino and a triple chocolate muffin, aiming to produce around 1,500 words before the items are consumed, as of 2016 in local coffee shops in Norwich.[55] This structure helps him balance productive writing with personal relaxation.[3]Bibliography
Standalone thrillers
Scarrow's standalone adult thrillers, published by the Orion imprint of Hachette UK, are self-contained speculative narratives that probe the fragility of modern society amid large-scale disruptions, such as energy shortages and geopolitical upheavals. Each was initially released in hardcover and paperback formats, followed by digital editions for wider accessibility. These works highlight Scarrow's shift toward high-stakes, crisis-driven plotting in his adult fiction, distinct from his serialized young adult series.- Last Light (2007): This debut thriller depicts the rapid unraveling of global infrastructure following a sudden depletion of oil reserves, emphasizing themes of survival and societal breakdown. It achieved bestseller status and remains one of Scarrow's most popular titles.[56]
- Afterlight (2009): Continuing the exploration of a post-oil world, the novel focuses on isolated communities navigating resource scarcity and emerging dangers in a collapsed civilization.[57]
- A Thousand Suns (2006): An alternate-history tale set against the backdrop of Cold War-era nuclear brinkmanship, it examines international espionage and the human cost of ideological conflicts. This was Scarrow's first adult novel.[58]
- October Skies (2008): Blending historical elements with thriller tension, the story unfolds in mid-19th-century America, centering on frontier hardships, personal vendettas, and unexpected revelations during a perilous journey.[59]
- The Candle Man (2012): A historical crime thriller set in Edwardian England, following a detective's pursuit of a serial killer inspired by Jack the Ripper, blending mystery with period detail.[5]
DCI Boyd series
The DCI Boyd series, a collection of crime thrillers featuring Detective Chief Inspector Bill Boyd and his team in Hastings, England, began publication in 2021 and is primarily self-published by the author through Amazon Kindle under the imprint Grrr Books.[45] As of November 2025, the series comprises 13 volumes released in chronological order.[43] The books in publication order are:- Silent Tide (2021, ISBN 979-8718823783 for paperback edition)[60]
- Old Bones New Bones (2021)[43]
- Burning Truth (2021)[43]
- The Last Train (2021)[43]
- The Safe Place (2022)[43]
- Gone to Ground (2022)[43]
- Argyle House (2022)[43]
- The Lock Up (2023)[61]
- The Archive (2023)[62]
- A Monster Among Us (2024)[63]
- The Vanishing (2024)[64]
- The Fool (2025)[65]
- A Guardian Angel (2025)[66]
TimeRiders series
The TimeRiders series is a nine-book young adult science fiction collection written by Alex Scarrow and published by Walker Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House, between 2010 and 2014.[68] The series follows a team of time-traveling agents tasked with preventing disruptions to the timeline, blending historical events with speculative fiction elements.[36] The books in publication order are as follows:| # | Title | Publication Year |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | TimeRiders | 2010 |
| 2 | Day of the Predator | 2010 |
| 3 | The Doomsday Code | 2011 |
| 4 | The Eternal War | 2011 |
| 5 | Gates of Rome | 2012 |
| 6 | City of Shadows | 2012 |
| 7 | The Pirate Kings | 2013 |
| 8 | The Mayan Prophecy | 2013 |
| 9 | The Infinity Cage | 2014 |
Ellie Quin series
The Ellie Quin series is a five-book young adult science fiction saga self-published by Alex Scarrow under his imprint Grrr Books between late 2012 and 2015, primarily in ebook format with limited print editions.[72] The series follows the adventures of Ellie Quin, a resourceful young woman navigating a vibrant, futuristic universe filled with cloning technology, interstellar travel, and quirky societal norms on distant planets.[39] The books were released as follows:- The Legend of Ellie Quin (December 2012, ebook; February 2013, print; ISBN 978-0957516007) introduces Ellie's origins on a remote agricultural world and her decision to seek excitement in the stars.[73][72]
- The World According to Ellie Quin (December 2012, ebook; ISBN 978-0957516014) explores her arrival on a bustling urban planet and the challenges of adapting to high-tech city life.
- Beneath the Neon Sky (December 2012, ebook; ISBN 978-0957516021) delves into Ellie's entrepreneurial schemes amid the underbelly of a neon-lit metropolis.[74]
- Ellie Quin in Wonderland (January 2014, ebook; ASIN B00I9P2Q3W) concludes the core arc with Ellie facing surreal threats in an experimental off-world habitat.
- Girl Reborn (October 2015, ebook; ASIN B08L3R9515) continues the story with Ellie and Jez marooned on WonderLand, battling corporate intrigue and personal revelations in a domed entertainment world.[75]