Richard Templar

Richard Templar

Richard Templar - Click to enlarge

Richard was a prolific writer and unconventional publisher who specialised in promoting unknown authors. He has over 60 books of his own published on a wide range of subjects including business, life and love (not all in any one book though!)



 

About Richard Templar

When Richard died suddenly in 2006, the reading world prematurely lost an inspired writer and innovative bold publisher who drew on his vast life experiences to write or identify books of huge appeal on a vast array of subjects.

Perhaps Richard's own words best sum up his motivation and appeal to readers:

'Before being a publisher I was a full time writer with over 60 books published on a wide range of subjects including business, astrology, alternative medicine, Chinese culture, sex and humour (not all in any one book though). Before being a writer - although that was what I always wanted to do - I did many jobs including being a casino general manger, business consultant, cave guide and stress management consultant (again never all at one time). I have been married twice, have six children, one granddaughter and I badly need a rest and a holiday.”

 

Biography of Richard Templar

Richard had wanted to write from an early age, but his ambition was not matched by academic aptitude. At 15 he was advised to leave Sutton County Grammar School in Surrey, since he had learnt all that he would. His first novel, a sci-fi adventure, was rejected when he was 16. His studies in art at Worthing Art College and in Brighton did not last either, coming to an end after a profitable tuck-shop scam was discovered.

Richard then became a blackjack dealer, figuring that working nights would leave him free to write by day. However, he soon married a fellow croupier, Sally McAlpine, in 1972, and the young family that ensued took care of his days. Richard was good at his job, however, and graduated to managing a casino in Bristol for Sir Reo Stakis.

By the mid-1980s Richard had decided on a change. He talked his way into a job as finance manager at Bristol Polytechnic Student Union — later he boasted that he arrived on his first day with nothing in his briefcase other than sandwiches and Hodder and Stoughton’s Teach Yourself Basic Accounting. Despite such inauspicious beginnings he managed to turn a flagging student union into one of the richest in the country.

In 1988 a compensation payment after a motorbike accident allowed him to stop work and concentrate on his writing. However, lack of success and the break-up of his marriage eventually obliged him to look for work again.

After a stint as a guide at Wookey Hole caves in Somerset, he tried his hand at running a natural health clinic, and then became a consultant in stress management. Through this he met both his future wife, Roni Jay, a writer, and a literary agent, who encouraged him to write a book on graphology.

Richard, who so far had written only fiction — novels, TV plays, film scripts, children’s books and so on — jumped at the chance. Despite knowing nothing about the subject he hammered out Graphology for Beginners in 13 days. It was published in 1994 and would be followed by some 60 books, on subjects ranging from Chinese culture to Tantric sex, from alternative lifestyles to business.

He and Jay decided that to make a living through writing they would have to produce a book a month. They kept it up for almost ten years, despite starting another family — Richard’s enthusiasm for being a father was perhaps a consequence of having been brought up without one himself.

Eventually the couple felt the need for something new again, and hit on publishing, deciding to specialise in books that tackled their subject from a personal viewpoint. Their aim was to “teach old dogs new tricks”, presenting a new angle on everyday living. They began to publish non-fiction books on a wide range of topics, and concentrated on promoting their writers, even though, invariably, they were quite unknown.

Richard was an inspirational salesman, and White Ladder Press swiftly gained a reputation in independent publishing for innovation and boldness.

Roni Jay, their three sons and a daughter and two sons from his first marriage survive him.

Richard Templar, writer and publisher, was born on April 4, 1950. He died of a heart attack on August 9, 2006, aged 56.

 

Programmes featuring Richard Templar

The Rules of Wealth from Red Audio

The Rules of Wealth

A personal code for prosperity

The Rules of Wealth explains the behaviours, the mind-sets, the lifestyles, and the financial know-how to becoming richer, happier and more prosperous.

£14.99

 

The Rules of Life from Red Audio

The Rules of Life

...the definitive code for living a better, happier, more successful kind of life...

The Rules of Life directs you happily towards a more rewarding, less stressful life.

£14.99

 

The Rules of Management from Red Audio

The Rules of Management

The definitive code for managerial success.

These golden rules cover what you say and what you do (and what you are seen to be doing). They show you how to inspire your teams to perform (and what to do when it doesn't) .

£14.99

 

The Rules of Work from Red Audio

The Rules of Work

The definitive code for personal success

This is the audio-book for you if you want to be successful and still be able to live with yourself, and be regarded as a thoroughly decent person by your colleagues and bosses.

£14.99