Niel Hancock started out from the Panhandle of Texas in 1941, and was on the  ground when the Sky Riders went down outside Roswell, New Mexico. Even as a lad,  that tweaked his curiosity, and then they touched off the Atom Bomb at Trinity  Site, which put him on the trail of the Road to the Sacred Mountain, young as he  was.
He grew up in that wilderness, always looking for clues to the Mystery, then  drifted on to the University, then Europe, then was involved in the full  catastrophe of marriage. He was then welcomed into the ranks of the U.S. Army  courtesy of his first wife, who turned him into the Selective Service in 1965.  Niel was drafted, and after his basic and advanced training, was assigned to the  716th MP BN, Viet Nam in July of 1967. He served through July of 1968, and was a  survivor of the Tet Offensive of that year. In the aftermath of the war, he  spent time in the Virgin Islands, then California, running with the wild  musicians that fueled those later years of the '60's, and finally ended up in  the desert of Chihuahua.
He came off the outlaw trail there, through a small miracle of friendship and  having bottomed out on alcohol and drugs, and began to do the one thing he had  always wanted, which was to write yarns and tales of the things he'd seen and  done.
Niel has continued to do that until this day, where he lives in the beautiful  hill country outside Austin, Texas, with his wife, C.E. Ursin, who is a potter.  They love Harley-Davidson and BMW motorcycles, and spend the good weather months  touring on their bikes.
He is still searching for clues about the Road to the Sacred Mountain.