{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"John David Mann - Blind Fear, Writing Mastery, and How Crime Writing Taught Him to Fall in Love With the World.","description":"What can one say about John David Mann? He has mastered, well he wouldn't say that, but I would, writing non-fiction, parable and fiction writing. He has also shown us how a marriage can be lived fully and be written about, how to start your own school, and how to run a business with over 100,000 people. And those are just a few of his achievements to date. My favorite is that he has launched almost every book he has written or co-authored on my show since 2015. Yup, that one is special to me because his words lift my spirits, awaken my brain and bring me joy. Well not just to me but to over 3 million people in 38 languages. Blind Fear is John's latest novel with Brandon Webb and it does not disappoint. Today we talked about what his latest novel means, how he manages to take a more 'Hitchcockian&quot; approach to writing than many others (my choice of words as you will hear), and how crime writing taught him to fall in love with the world.&amp;nbsp; These aren't the usual questions John gets asked, and his answers may surprise you.&amp;nbsp; Take a listen as we dive deep with John David Mann on life, fiction, writing mastery mentoring and a few other things. John David Mann&amp;nbsp;has been creating careers since he was a teenager. Before turning to business and journalism, he forged a successful career as a concert cellist and prize-winning composer. At fifteen he won the prestigious BMI Awards to Student Composers and received the award at the Waldorf Astoria in New York City, where he met such twentieth-century-music luminaries as William Schumann and Leopold Stokowski. He apprenticed as a choral conductor under his father, Dr. Alfred Mann, which gave him the chance to meet more legendary figures of classical music, including Randall Thompson, Leonard Bernstein, Boris Goldovsky, Robert Shaw, and George Crumb. His musical compositions were performed throughout the U.S. and his musical score for Aeschylus\u2019&amp;nbsp;Prometheus Bound (written at age thirteen) was performed as part of a theatrical production of the play at the stone amphitheater in Epidaurus, Greece\u2014the very one, in fact, where the play was originally premiered a few thousand years earlier. At age seventeen, he and a few friends started their own high school in New Jersey (called Changes, Inc.). \u201cAlternative\u201d though they were, his school successfully placed its students in such universities as Harvard and Yale. After graduating, he joined the school\u2019s faculty. In the years since he has taught children in affluent Boston suburbs, Indiana farms, and the poorest neighborhoods on the outskirts of Philadelphia. John never planned to go into business; it just seemed to keep working out that way. He has founded one school, one food distribution business, one graphic design business, and two publishing companies. John\u2019s diverse career has made him a thought leader in several different industries. In 1986 he founded and wrote for&amp;nbsp;Solstice, a journal on health, nutrition, and environmental issues. His series on the climate crisis, \u201cWhither the Trees?\u201d (yes, he was writing about this back in the eighties), was selected for national reprint in 1989 in&amp;nbsp;Utne Reader&amp;nbsp;for a readership of over one hundred thousand. In 1992 John helped write and produce the underground bestseller&amp;nbsp;The Greatest Networker in the World, by John Milton Fogg, which became the defining book in its industry. During the 1990s, John built a multimillion-dollar sales\/distribution organization of over a&amp;nbsp;hundred thousand&amp;nbsp;people. He was cofounder and senior editor of the legendary&amp;nbsp;Upline&amp;nbsp;journal and editor in chief of&amp;nbsp;Networking Times. As a public speaker he has addressed audiences of thousands. John is an award-winning author whose writings have earned the Axiom Business Book Award (Gold Medal, for&amp;nbsp;The Go-Giver), the Nautilus Award (for&amp;nbsp;A Deadly Misunderstanding), and Taiwan\u2019s Golden Book Award for Innovation (for&amp;nbsp;You Call the Shots).&amp;nbsp;The Go-Giver&amp;nbsp;was also honored with the Living Now Book Awards \u201cEvergreen Medal\u201d in 2017 for its \u201ccontributions to positive global change,\u201d and cited on&amp;nbsp;Inc.\u2019s \u201cMost Motivational Books Ever Written\u201d&amp;nbsp;and HubSpot\u2019s \u201c20 Most Highly Rated Sales Books of All Time\u201d;&amp;nbsp;The Go-Giver Leader&amp;nbsp;was listed on&amp;nbsp;Entrepreneur&amp;nbsp;magazine\u2019s \u201c10 Books Every Leader Should Read\u201d&amp;nbsp;and&amp;nbsp;Forbes&amp;nbsp;magazine\u2019s \u201c8 Books Every Young Leaders Should Read.\u201d&amp;nbsp;His 2012&amp;nbsp;Take the Lead&amp;nbsp;(with Betsy Myers) was named Best Leadership Book of 2011 by Tom Peters and the&amp;nbsp;Washington Post. His first novel,&amp;nbsp;Steel Fear&amp;nbsp;(2021, with former Navy SEAL Brandon Webb), was hailed by Lee Child as \u201can instant classic, maybe an instant legend\u201d and nominated for a Barry Award. Jeffery Deaver called the sequel,&amp;nbsp;Cold Fear (2022), \u201cone of the best crime novels of the year.\u201d You can read his thoughts on entering the world of crime fiction at JohnDavidMann.com His books are published in 38 languages and have sold more than 3 million copies. John coauthored the international bestselling classic&amp;nbsp;The Go-Giver&amp;nbsp;(with Bob Burg), the&amp;nbsp;New York Times&amp;nbsp;bestsellers&amp;nbsp;The Latte Factor&amp;nbsp;(with David Bach),&amp;nbsp;The Red Circle&amp;nbsp;(with Brandon Webb), and&amp;nbsp;Flash Foresight&amp;nbsp;(with Daniel Burrus), and&amp;nbsp;The Answer&amp;nbsp;(ghost-written for John Assaraf and Murray Smith) and&amp;nbsp;the national&amp;nbsp;bestsellers&amp;nbsp;The Slight Edge&amp;nbsp;(with Jeff Olson),&amp;nbsp;Among Heroes&amp;nbsp;(with Brandon Webb),&amp;nbsp;Out of the Maze&amp;nbsp;(with Spencer Johnson) and&amp;nbsp;Real&amp;nbsp;Leadership&amp;nbsp;(with John Addison). He has written for&amp;nbsp;American Executive, CNBC,&amp;nbsp;CrimeReads,&amp;nbsp;Financial Times, Forbes.com,&amp;nbsp;Huffington Post,&amp;nbsp;Ivey Business Journal,&amp;nbsp;Leader to Leader,&amp;nbsp;Leadership Excellence,&amp;nbsp;Master Salesmanship,&amp;nbsp;Strategy &amp;amp; Leadership, and&amp;nbsp;Wired. You can find his writings on&amp;nbsp;Huffington Post&amp;nbsp;here. He is married to Ana Gabriel Mann (check out their&amp;nbsp;wedding photos&amp;nbsp;and&amp;nbsp;vows), his coauthor on&amp;nbsp;The Go-Giver Marriage, and considers himself the luckiest mann in the world. ","author_name":"It's All About the Questions","author_url":"http:\/\/www.LauraSteward.com","html":"<iframe title=\"Libsyn Player\" style=\"border: none\" src=\"\/\/html5-player.libsyn.com\/embed\/episode\/id\/27450630\/height\/90\/theme\/custom\/thumbnail\/yes\/direction\/forward\/render-playlist\/no\/custom-color\/88AA3C\/\" height=\"90\" width=\"600\" scrolling=\"no\"  allowfullscreen webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen oallowfullscreen msallowfullscreen><\/iframe>","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/assets.libsyn.com\/secure\/content\/156050502"}