About the Author
John Poindexter is an American crime-thriller author and retired English teacher whose life reads like the prologue to one of his own novels. Born on January 15, 1951, Poindexter spent years serving as a Special Agent with the U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) before turning his investigative precision toward storytelling.
Drawing on his background in counterespionage and criminal investigation, he has crafted the Steve Hawks series, gritty political thrillers built around a secret law enforcement organization that operates under presidential authority. His titles include:
A fourth instalment is currently in progress, alongside a new series featuring a female private detective spun from one of his short stories.
From Agent to Author: A Life of Investigation and Imagination
Poindexter’s writing journey began in 1990, when a college professor encouraged him to turn his field experiences into fiction. The idea stuck. Over the next three decades, he transformed his real-world exposure to intelligence work, fraud, and counterespionage into page-turning narratives built on authenticity and insight.
Poindexter’s late-career turn toward fiction reflects a growing movement among professionals who translate real-world expertise into creative work, a trend we analyzed in “5 Research Trends Every Author Should Know Before 2026.” His journey embodies that shift: transforming firsthand experience into narrative authority.
“Being an English teacher, I concentrated on Shakespeare and the classics,” he says. “Reading Sherlock Holmes helped me decide to write my own books.”
That blend of classic literary structure and procedural realism gives Poindexter’s stories their distinctive tone, driven by duty, detail, and moral tension rather than spectacle.
Craft and Process: Dreams, Discipline, and Digital Tools
For Poindexter, writing is both methodical and inspired. “My dreams help me come up with story lines,” he explains. “One short story was nothing but a dream I had one night.”
Music also plays a quiet but steady role in his process, keeping rhythm in his routine as he types. Like many modern indie authors, he handles much of the production himself, writing in Microsoft Word, running edits through ProWritingAid, and formatting his own manuscripts.
His covers tell a similar story of independence. His son designs some; others, like New World Order, were created by the professional design studio 100 Covers. “I am my own publisher,” he admits with characteristic humour, “and am very demanding at times.”
Publishing Independence: Building Books from the Ground Up
Poindexter distributes through Amazon KDP, Draft2Digital, and IngramSpark, platforms that have become the backbone of contemporary indie publishing. His budget is lean, around $100 per title, and his motivation is refreshingly uncommercial.
“I don’t write to get rich,” he says. “I just enjoy sharing my stories.”
At WriteStats, that mindset aligns with a broader trend among mature indie authors: a shift from algorithmic ambition to craft-driven sustainability. Writers like Poindexter demonstrate that the joy of storytelling, not sales metrics, can sustain a lifelong creative practice.
Facing the Challenges: Time, Not Ideas
Unlike many debut writers, Poindexter’s challenge isn’t inspiration; it’s time.
“Finding the time to sit down at the computer and type,” he says, “that’s the hardest part.”
Balancing writing with daily life, he maintains a steady output while continuing to explore new plots born from dreams, memory, and experience. His commitment reflects what WriteStats calls long-arc authorship, careers built on patience and perseverance rather than overnight success.
On AI, Technology, and the Future of Writing
Poindexter’s perspective on artificial intelligence is pragmatic, not fearful. “I’m with using AI,” he notes. “It could be used to create some nice-looking covers.”
His stance echoes a growing sentiment among veteran authors: use technology to enhance design and efficiency, not to replace creativity. It’s a view rooted in the same discipline that once guided his investigative work: precision tools, human judgment.
Legacy: A Quiet Dedication to Storytelling
When asked what legacy he hopes to leave, Poindexter’s answer is humble and heartfelt:
“I hope those who have read my work have enjoyed it.”
That simplicity speaks volumes. In an industry often preoccupied with virality and visibility, Poindexter’s story is one of consistency, authenticity, and quiet dedication. His novels may be fictional, but their foundationโtruth, order, and justiceโreflects a life lived in pursuit of them.
As he develops the next Steve Hawks instalment and begins work on his new female-led detective series, Poindexter remains a testament to how real-world experience can become lasting storytelling fuel.
Key Takeaway for Emerging Authors
John Poindexter reminds us that great fiction doesn’t begin with trends; it starts with experience, discipline, and the courage to translate reality into story.
In a publishing world increasingly shaped by technology and algorithms, his career proves that authenticity still resonates and that sometimes the most compelling thrillers come from the people who’ve lived them.
Explore John Poindexter’s work at johnpoindexter.com or on Amazon.







