As a child, David Metzenthen was a nature boy; he loved  fishing and farm work, exploring the bush, and being outdoors under the  stars. He also lived very much inside his own head; feeling that the  world was a place of unlimited adventure. He harboured dreams of  becoming a cowboy, a fisherman, a farmer, a sailor, or a writer. Instead  he left home at eighteen, with a copy of Jack Kerouac's On the Road for company, and hitch-hiked his way around New Zealand. Returning to  Australia, David worked as a builder's labourer and advertising copy  writer before finding success as a writer of books for children and  young adults.
David Metzenthen now lives with his wife and two children in  Melbourne and is one of Australia's top writers for young people. He has  received many awards for excellence, including the 2000 CBCA Book of  the Year Award: Older Readers for Stony Heart Country, a 2003 Victorian Premier's Literary Award for Wildlight, and a 2003 Queensland Premier's Literary Award for Boys of Blood and Bone. In 2004, Boys of Blood and Bone also won a NSW Premier's Literary Award and was an Honour Book in the CBCA Book of the Year Awards: Older Readers. His novel Black Water was an Honour Book in the 2008 CBCA Book of the Year Awards: Older Readers, and Jarvis 24 won the CBCA Award for Book of the Year: Older Readers in 2010, as well  as being shortlisted for the Prime Minister's Literary Award, WA  Premier's Literary Award, Inky Awards and SA Festival Awards for  Literature.