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John J. Nance

John J. Nance
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John J. Nance

John J. Nance, aviation analyst for ABC News and a familiar face on Good Morning America, is the author of seventeen books, including Fire Flight, Skyhook, Turbulence, and Headwind. Two of his novels, Pandora's Clock and Medusa's Child, have been made into highly successful television miniseries. A lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Air Force Reserve, Nance is a decorated pilot veteran of Vietnam and Operations Desert Storm/Desert Shield. He lives in University Place, Washington.

Orbit is now available in Trade Paperback
Feb 05, 2011
Orbit will be released on February 05, 2011 in Trade Paperback
Feb 05, 2011
Orbit will be released on March 13, 2006 in eBook
Mar 13, 2006
Orbit is now available in eBook
Mar 13, 2006
Orbit will be released on March 07, 2006 in Hardcover
Mar 07, 2006
Orbit is now available in Hardcover
Mar 07, 2006
Orbit will be released on March 07, 2006 in
Mar 07, 2006
Orbit is now available in
Mar 07, 2006
Saving Cascadia will be released on January 31, 2006 in Mass Market Paperback
Jan 31, 2006
Saving Cascadia is now available in Mass Market Paperback
Jan 31, 2006
Saving Cascadia will be released on March 03, 2005 in eBook
Mar 03, 2005
Saving Cascadia is now available in eBook
Mar 03, 2005
Saving Cascadia will be released on February 22, 2005 in
Feb 22, 2005
Saving Cascadia is now available in
Feb 22, 2005
Fire Flight will be released on November 11, 2003 in eBook
Nov 11, 2003
Fire Flight is now available in eBook
Nov 11, 2003

Authors on the Web

San Angelo Standard-Times, October 20, 2011
...Champagne (TCU Press, $35). The profiles range across the political spectrum, from such early 20th century leaders as John Nance Garner and Sam Rayburn, to two Texans from Congress who became president, Lyndon Johnson and the first George Bush, and later...
911Blogger.com, July 12, 2011
..."number of aviation experts agreed" with Jenkins and had said that "the hijackers must have been experienced pilots." John Nance, an airline pilot, author, and aviation analyst, said that "the direct hits on the two towers and on the Pentagon suggested...
The Last Word On Nothing, May 4, 2011
...pretty hard to take evasive maneuvers. “It’s like hitting a speed bump at 500 mph,” aviation consultant John Nance told ABC News in 2009 after a particularly nasty bit of unexpected turbulence caused some serious injuries on Continental flight 128....