On leaving school at 16 Barnard joined the Kent Messenger as a junior reporter at which time, aged 18, he started on his first novel, The Arena. From 1959 to 1961 he served in the Royal Air Force as a National Serviceman. On demobilisation he became editor of Smiths Industries’ group newspaper and wrote scripts for the Smithsindustrial film unit before joining the Norcros Group in 1967 as group public relations manager. A move into PR consultancy led to appointments as managing director of Burson-Marsteller Corporate Communications, chairman and chief executive of Extel Communications and chairman of Fleishman Hillard Europe. During this period he wrote for a wide variety of publications from advertising media to motor sport titles and was a regular contributor to The Oldie as well as a broadcaster on radio and TV.In 2000 he quit advertising and public relations to write fiction full-time. He has since completed five novels.
Personal life
Barnard married Janet in 1961. They have two daughters, Helen Louise and Katherine Jane, born 1964 and 1967 respectively. Barnard is a weekend racing driver with a driving career spanning fifty years in many different cars and a variety of disciplines from circuit races to sprints and hill climbs. He also sails a Corribee sloop from Rye Harbour.
Works
Novels
Barnard's debut novel, Blue Man Falling, was published by Headline in 2006. This chronicled the lives of RAF fighter pilots in the Battle of France. It formed the first in a trilogy of novels following the Englishman Kit Curtis and American Ossie Wolf to Malta and North Africa. A fourth, standalone, novel, A Time For Heroes, described as a "sweeping, three-generation historical epic encompassing both World Wars, about heroism, the romance of aviation and the conflict between fathers and sons", was published by Headline in 2012. His fifth novel, A Remembrance Of Ghosts, a postwar mystery thriller set in the world of journalism, was released on Amazon Kindle in October 2019, described by crime writer Peter James as "superb, a wonderful book".
Blue Man Falling
Band of Eagles
To Play The Fox
A Time For Heroes
A Remembrance of Ghosts
Reaction to Barnard's novels has been generally positive, focusing on the authenticity of the history and characters. Jeremy Jehu in The Daily Telegraph noted of Blue Man Falling that "Barnard subtly deflates the rhetoric of derring-do with never a jarring hint that his tenderly drawn pilots are not wholly rooted in their time. His fine balance of freshness and authenticity is, most assuredly, no literary piece of cake."