Tuesday, June 28, 2022

19: I am not Timothy

 

I am not Timothy.

Longtime readers might wonder if I included myself in this chapter. No. I couldn’t be farther from Timothy. I’m not a drug user, and like Jakob, I tend to want sex to “mean something.”

Click here to read Ascension: Jakob's Ladder, 19 [Chap. 4]

But I did want to include my name. One of my friends was aghast that his name was used for one of my more dislikable characters. I assured him that I just pull names at random, trying not to duplicate them. (With five books now written, you have to pay attention to that.)

No name associated with a character means that person is a real person. At least not by that name. I do take attributes from people I know and occasionally incorporate those traits into a character. I feel that makes the character more realistic and relatable. My other half inspired a brief moment when Jakob was putting whipped cream on his Thanksgiving pie. When my partner put away the whipped cream, I watched him take it back out to squirt a dot on the very tip of his pie. I found it adorable and included it in a scene in Hi, I’m Lance.

Some authors on Nifty will tell you things in their stories are from real life. The folks in Jackson Bend are not. It is purely my imagination, but I do include qualities from people I know from time to time. Jackson Bend isn’t even a real town. I specifically chose not to select a real place because I figured someone eventually would say, “I live there, and our town is nothing like that!” Ha. Keeping it fictious is easier. I don’t even specify the state, but I have always felt it is somewhere in the middle of the country, the mid-West or the plains. An exact location isn’t necessary. I find it better for readers to use their imaginations.

For anyone who was hoping I was a stoned sex maniac… sorry to disappoint. Hopefully you’ll stay along for the ride. (wink)

For those that love Jakob, he still has some dark chapters. You know it gets better.

4 comments:

  1. Can’t say you didn’t warn us. The actual sex acts weren’t so bad, but Jakob’s desperation and developing self-loathing were very hard to take. As you say, at least we know that it gets better.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I enjoy your writing but this is a very sad story. It sometimes is painful to read. The only thing that keeps me reading is that there is a happy ending.

    Thank you for your time and talent!

    K.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I read the chapter and I have to say that I didn't like Tim one bit. He basically used Jakob for his own pleasure and I am glad that Jakob hasn't tried to find Timothy again.

    D.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I was reflecting on why I felt gloomy after reading the latest Jakob chapter, and it came to me that he was (at this stage) an emergent man without any anchor or moorings at all. He is really without a home or a family, and picking his way among friends he meets along the way does not satisfy at all.

    I suspect we have a lot of gloomy stuff to get through before Jakob develops attachments.

    As I have read over many of the Nifty stories, I am impressed by how little organized religion matters in their personal lives. Jakob had been (with his family) in a fundamentalist church and he recalls some values out of that contact, but the church is gone for all intents and purposes.

    ReplyDelete

Husbands: The Conclusion of "Heart and Soul"

Well, Book Nine is now complete. Click here to read the conclusion, Chapter 16 of Heart and Soul . Certainly, it has ended dramatically dif...