Philip McLaren was born in Redfern, although his family comes from the Warrumbungle Mountain area, New South Wales and he is a descendant of the Kamilaroi people.
McLaren has worked as a television producer, a director, designer, illustrator, architect, sculptor, lifeguard and copywriter. He has been a creative director in television, advertising and film production companies both in Australia and overseas.
His filmography includes, as art director, The Mavis Bramston Show (1964), The Mike Walsh Show (1973), Grand Old Country (known in the USA as The Ronnie Prophet Show) (1975), and It's a Knockout (1985) and, as production designer, The Beachcombers (1972), Country Joy (1979), and the 1983 film Hostage.
After this varied career, McLaren focused on writing and was among the first Aboriginal writers to write a thriller. His first novel, Sweet Water -- Stolen Land, won the David Unaipon Award in 1992. He subsequently published a number of other novels, including crime thrillers Scream Black Murder, Lightning Mine, and Murder in Utopia: the latter won the 2010 Prix Litteraire des Recits de l'ailleurs, a French award for international literature.
McLaren holds a Doctor of Creative Arts and has worked as a lecturer at Southern Cross University.