Barry Maitland was born in Paisley, Scotland and grew up in London. After studying architecture at Cambridge, Maitland practised and taught in the UK (at the University of Sheffield) before moving to Australia, where he became a Professor of Architecture with the University of Newcastle.
Maitland credits his burgeoning interest in writing crime fiction to the 1990 Newcastle earthquake in which, as he notes on his website, 'Margaret, my wife, was almost killed when the house fell in'. As a reaction to the chaos of the period, he began plotting a murder mystery, which, when published in 1994, became the first of the long-running Brock and Kolla series.
In 2000, he retired from academic life to become a full time writer of crime fiction. He now works in a small town in the Hunter Valley.
The joint inaugural winner of the Ned Kelly Award for Best Australian Crime Novel (for The Malconenta, with Paul Thomas's Inside Dope), his work has regularly made the Ned Kelly Awards shortlists in the intervening twenty years, most recently for Ash Island.