9 minute read
Author John Lynch
THE ARK
Inspired by true events, long-term American expat and entrepreneur John Lynch talks about his debut novel, The Ark…
WI: What motivated you to pick up the pen in the first place?
JL: I think I’m quite a three-dimensional person, so although I’ve been running my own business, Lynka, for nearly 30-years now, writing was always something of a passion – I used to be a regular columnist for the Warsaw Business Journal and a British clothing magazine, so it was never the case that I suddenly woke up one day and decided on writing a book. It was a dream of mine years ago, and finally the right story came to me. The Ark is based on true
events – but what does that mean. How much is truth, how much is fiction?
The skeleton of the story, that is how a private equity fund tried to take over my business, well that actually happened. During the battle to rescue my firm I started taking copious notes – mainly for legal reasons. Later, partly as a sort of catharsis, I began writing the experience up. Honestly though, it just didn’t work so instead I found myself taking the factual concept and fictionalizing it. Once I did that, and once I found myself not tied down by facts and real people, the story came pretty easily. It was great fun creating all the characters, so while I’d say thirty percent is rooted in reality, this should most definitely be treated as a work of fiction.
You mention catharsis – how traumatic was the whole experience of seeing everything you’d work for suddenly swept from underfoot?
Hugely. I created reasons as to why and how it happened in the book, but in real life I remain none the wiser. Never did I think that I could lose a company I’d spent twenty years building overnight. Genuinely, it was seriously debilitating.
How does Poland come out in all of this?
What happened to me was incredibly rare, and in a no way should either my book or my personal experience be seen as an indictment on this country. If anything, it was a validation of the rule of law here. Yes, the wheels moved tremendously slowly, but truth prevailed. Never was there a hint of corruption from the Polish judges.
After being blindsided like this, how do you pick yourself up?
First of all, I learned never to let a crisis takeover your life. At first, I thought I’d end up having a heart attack. In a twist of fate, though, right in the midst of my crisis, I was invited to a small, private meeting with the Dalai Lama in Prague and it ended up completely changing my perspective. After, I took an utterly new approach. “If I lose everything, then I’ll just start again”. I calmed down a lot and realized the value of manipulating my own emotions. I’ve always been an optimist, so when I realized
that my brain wasn’t working in that way anymore, I put the effort in to change that.
Any tips!
Whatever picks you up when you’re in a crisis, whatever works for you – just do it! It’s a bit of an American cliché, but for me that meant watching a Rocky movie or popping on some Bon Jovi – Keep the Faith! It may sound absurd, but if something lifts you up then it’s worth doing. In general, life is about ups and downs, but if you learn how to handle and climb out of the downs then it becomes a whole lot easier.
What’s your advice to foreign entrepreneurs arriving to Poland today?
I hear people say all the time that I was lucky to be here in 1991 – that I arrived at the right time. But that was no guarantee of success, and for sure the failure rate was just as high then as it is now. Likewise, new opportunities still abide today, just maybe in different fields. As for advice, I’d probably simply echo the lessons I’ve learned along the way: choose the right partners. Be humble. Respect your employees, your suppliers and your clients. Also, don’t come here thinking you’ll do well because the labor pool is cheap – nowadays you need to find the best team, and Poland has heaps of talent. Lastly, don’t think of the Polish market alone. Think of this country as a platform to reach the rest of Europe and beyond.
Times have changed…
Being an entrepreneur in 1991 was a thankless task. We had fifteen people but just one telephone line between them – if someone was on the phone, that basically meant the rest of the sales staff sat around doing nothing. There wasn’t even a delivery service running between Krakow and Warsaw. If I wanted to deliver t-shirts to the capital, I’d send them up by train and my brother would be there at the other end to pick them up before getting on a bus to deliver them in person. I mean, in Britain or the US that’s the sort of thing that might happen in the 19th century!
Corruption of course was legendary back then?
Right. Personally, I was always fiercely anti-corruption, and that’s one of the reasons I founded the American Chamber of Commerce down in Krakow. I realized that such an organization could help defend against certain corruption, and even at times open doors in a way that was completely legit.
If it was all so challenging, why the hell did you strike out on your own in the first place?
I came over to Poland in 1991 as part of a volunteer program to aid Poland’s post-communist transition. I only intended to stay for a year before returning to the States but saw myself surrounded here by young entrepreneurs who had no money, no experience, but lots of passion and ideas. I figured if they could do it, then maybe so could I. Besides, looking around I realized Poland and Central Europe were pretty much the most exciting place on the planet at the time – it was living through unprecedented changes. It felt like it would reinvent itself every six-months. I asked myself, why leave that behind to jump back into the New York rat race back home?
John Lynch
is an American entrepreneur, writer, and speaker who lives in Poland since 1991. He was one of the fi rst expatriates to launch a start-up (“Lynka”) in Poland in the aftermath of the fall of communism. John was awarded the Gold Cross of Merit from President Komorowski, and was named one of the 10 American Pioneers who made the greatest contributions to the successful transformation of Poland. He is former Entrepreneur of the Year in Poland. John has Polish roots – his great-grandmother was from Białystok. He is fl uent in Polish. John has an engineering degree from Lehigh University and an MBA from The Wharton School. John was a regular columnist for The Warsaw Business Journal and Images – a UK apparel magazine. He lives with his wife Kasia, an English teacher, and two children Kuba and Zosia outside Krakow. The Ark is John’s literary debut, inspired by his own real experiences. The world premiere of the book takes place in Poland.
“What a debut! And what a thriller. Bravo – give me more!” Agata Młynarska TVN Discovery, Co-Founder WOŚP, Women’s Advocate
A story inspired by real events.
Truman Chase is a young aspiring New York fashion designer with a vision.
Fate leads him to Krakow, Poland where he falls in love and builds a successful fashion house, TruCo. His dream is within his grasp – that is, until a mysterious investment group comes after him. Fernando Tomasi, is a Gucci-wearing Wall Street flunky with a hair spray addiction and a penchant for hostile takeovers. The unscrupulous son of a wealthy Latino family, he builds his own fund The Ark. When The Ark almost capsizes due to Fernando’s greed, he frantically searches for the millions needed to keep it afloat. Fernando targets TruCo and wages war against Truman.
Now Truman stands to lose everything. Can he find the faith and strength to defend his life’s work and build his dream?
Two Men. Two Dreams. One Battle.
“Everything that we love in a thriller: emotions, money, fascinating characters. Plus, the unique perspective of an American in Poland.”
Waldemar Kumor Culture editor, Newsweek (Poland)
“The Ark throws the reader into the simultaneously hopeful, chaotic, and dangerous world that is Central and Eastern Europe in the post-Soviet era …”
Kenneth Fairfax The White House. National Security Council Director for Russia, Ukraine & Eurasia (ret.)
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So, no regrets!
No, none. I started out here launching a business, but that doesn’t explain away 30-years of life. There’s obviously a lot more to it than that. There’s a sense of history here as well as a mental toughness and humor born from those historic hardships. Furthermore, I get the idea that Poles are still rejoicing from the fall of communism 30plus years back. It’s great to be around that positive energy.
““A fast-paced thriller. The David & Goliath of global fashion and fi nance.”
Georgette Mosbacher US Ambassador to Poland (2018-21)
JOHN LYNCH
JOHN LYNCH
Praise for The Ark:
“… a dynamic, fast-paced thriller. I couldn’t put it down.”
Hon. Georgette Mosbacher US Ambassador to Poland (2018-2021)
“What a debut! And what a thriller. Bravo – give me more!”
Agata Młynarska TVN Discovery, Co-Founder WOŚP, Women’s Advocate “The Ark has everything that we love in a thriller: emotions, money, fascinating characters.”
Waldemar Kumor, Culture editor , Newsweek (Polska) “…a spellbinding tale of fi nancial and international intrigue… you will root for Truman Chase and admire his faith …”
Prof. Lori Rosenkopf, Ph.D. Vice Dean of Entrepreneurship, The Wharton School “That [Lynch] attains such intimate understanding of the Polish legal system is an achievement in itself. (…) that he did so in such a thrilling & suspenseful way is a gift to Polish readers.”
Prof. Zbigniew Ćwiąkalski, Ph. D. Former Minister of Justice of Poland
“…hard to put down. It is diffi cult to believe that this is a debut novel for the author.”
New Eastern Europe magazine “Action-packed thriller…delivers a one-two punch. Moreover, it does it with a hero that I can really relate to - a young and courageous entrepreneur.”
Verne Harnish, Rockefeller Habits
THE ARK
Sacrificing a burgeoning career with Ralph Lauren, Bronx-raised Truman Chase transforms his family’s ailing clothing firm in Krakow into a booming success only to find his dreams shattered when a hostile takeover sees his hard work vanish. Set largely in Poland, what follows is a high-strung thriller as Chase fights to save everything he believes in from the unscrupulous fund that’s out to destroy him. Published by Ringier Axel Springer (Polish) and Oh Book! (English), both Polish and English versions available from EMPiK and www.literia.pl. The Ark marks the literary debut of John Lynch.