Interview
Do you aim to
complete a set number of pages or words each day?
No. I pretty much aim
at writing 2-3 hours per day, all fresh material. I usually qquit
when the last scene I'm working on comes to an end. I hate leaving a
scene open-ended.
Writers are often
associated with loner tendencies; is there any truth to that?
Well, sure. Writing is
a solitary activity by necessity. My friends and family all know not
to phone me or drop by my house between the hours of nine a.m. and
noon because that's when I write and I don't want to be disturbed. I
don't answer the phone, don't answer the doorbell and don't listen to
music. I'm fixated on my writing only.
Do you set a plot or
prefer going wherever an idea takes you?
I'm a "pantser."
That is, I have no idea how a story will end when I start it. I never
outline a story or a book. I start out with one or two characters who
are facing adversity and take it from there. Oftentimes the
characters start telling me what to write. That's when I know I have
a good book on my hands.
Do you read much and
if so who are your favorite authors?
I don't read as much as
I should, buty I try to read for a least a half-hour every day,
usually when I go to bed at night. I read some nonfiction: histories
and biographies mostly. In the fiction department I tend toward
literary authors: Michael Chabon's my favorite, but I also like
Hemingway, Kurt Vonnegut, John Cheever, John Irving, E. L. Doctorow,
Yann Martel and Tom Franklin, to name a few.
Over the years, what
would you say has improved significantly in your writing?
My descriptive passages
are much better now than in my earlier years of writing fiction. It's
terribly important to set scene, to allow the readers to experience
the sounds, smells and sights your characters encounter in each
scene. What is ther source of light, what time of day is it? What's
the weather like? What's cooking in the kitchen? And what sort of
noise enters the room through an open window. Is there music playing
in the car?
Title: On the Way to San Jose
Author: Jere' M. Fishback
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: September 25, 2017
Heat Level: 2 - Fade to Black Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 53900
Genre: Contemporary, LGBT, College, bi, gay, contemporary, road trip
Add to Goodreads
Synopsis
Terrence, a socially inept clarinetist whose driver’s license is suspended, needs his panel van driven from Orlando to San Jose, where he plans to start a new life. Levi’s a Stanford University student with Asperger’s Syndrome who answers Terrence’s Internet drive-away listing.The two start out as strangers, but as their journey westward progresses a friendship is kindled, one that will change both boys’ lives in profound ways.
Excerpt
On the Way to San Jose
Jere’ M. Fishback © 2017
All Rights Reserved
Chapter One
Levi McKane studied an Internet
drive-away listing:
Need vehicle driven from Orlando to San
Jose, CA. We can split the gas. I want to leave ASAP.
The listing provided a phone number.
Levi was twenty with an athletic build,
cobalt eyes, and sandy hair that grew to his shoulders. He would start his
third year at Stanford University in two weeks. He’d earned himself a full
academic scholarship to the California school after graduating second in his
class from Merritt Island High in Brevard County, Florida two years before.
But his life was not perfect.
When Levi was four years old, a child
development specialist diagnosed him with a mild form of Asperger’s Syndrome, a
disorder causing difficulties in social interaction. So, despite his high
intelligence, Levi had never mastered the art of human communication. At school
and home, he said little. He kept to himself and avoided eye contact.
Conversations, even with family members, seemed like thickets to Levi. He had
no close friends in either Brevard County or California, and until recently had
never dated. In truth, he felt the happiest fishing by himself on his parents’
dock with a six-pack of beer at his side.
“Leave him alone,” his dad must have
told Levi’s mother a thousand times. “It won’t be long before he figures
himself out.”
Over summer break from Stanford, Levi
had saved up three thousand dollars while working at his dad’s auto repair
business on Merritt Island. He could have flown to California if he chose to,
but didn’t want to waste part of his summer earnings on airfare, not with the
problem he faced.
He’d met a girl named Taylor back in
June. She waited tables at a beachfront grill that Levi sometimes patronized
after surfing at the Cocoa Beach Pier. Taylor wasn’t the subtle type; right
away she let Levi know she liked him. And Levi, being a socially artless boy,
let her take him down a path he hadn’t walked before. One thing led to another,
and now Taylor was pregnant.
While he studied his computer screen,
Levi thought of the phone call he’d received from Taylor a month before: “As of
yesterday, I was late on my period two weeks. I knew something was wrong, so I
bought a testing kit, and now it’s for certain. What’ll we do?”
“We?” Levi said. “Are you even sure it’s
mine?”
“Positive, asshole.”
They discussed abortion. Taylor wasn’t
inclined, as she was Catholic. Then they discussed marriage. Levi wasn’t
inclined, as he was due back at Stanford. And though he didn’t tell her so,
Taylor wasn’t exactly someone he’d want to share life with. A girl of limited
intellect and shrill voice, she was rough around the edges, and Levi knew she’d
wear the pants in whatever marriage she made—a union he wanted no part of.
So, the pregnancy floated in limbo.
Levi studied the Internet offer again.
He had drive-away experience. At the end of last school year, he’d driven a
retiree’s Crown Victoria from San Francisco to St. Petersburg. The old guy even
kicked in two hundred bucks for gasoline. Levi made the cross-country trip in
five days and delivered the car to the owner’s Florida condo where Levi’s mom
picked him up and drove him to Florida’s east coast.
Making the three thousand mile trip by
himself had not bothered him. He liked listening to the Crown Vic’s radio while
traversing the never-ending brownness of southern Arizona and New Mexico, and
then the ceaseless hill country of west Texas. The whole experience made him
feel like the characters in one of his favorite books, On The Road by Jack
Kerouac.
Now, seated at his parents’ kitchen
table, Levi swung his gaze to a pair of double-hung windows with a view of the
Indian River. He scratched his chin stubble while watching a shrimp boat cruise
past his family’s dock, likely headed to Sebastian Inlet. The boat’s gauzy nets
fluttered like dragonfly wings. Sunlight reflected in the boat’s wake that
ruffled the river’s otherwise glassy surface. The time was close to 9:00 a.m.
and already the day was heating up. By noon, the temperature would hit
ninety-two; the relative humidity would likely reach a similar level, and Levi
was glad he wasn’t working at the garage that day. He could stay in the
air-conditioned comfort of his parents’ home.
When Levi punched up the phone number in
the drive-away ad, a boy answered on the second ring, his voice a scratchy
tenor. He answered Levi’s questions in a rapid-fire cadence, as though he
couldn’t get the words out of his mouth fast enough.
“It’s actually a van, not a car.”
“No, it doesn’t have air-conditioning.”
“Yeah, I’d be riding with you to San
Jose. I can’t drive; my license is suspended.”
When the boy asked Levi how soon he
could make the trip, Levi said, “I can leave the day after tomorrow. I’ll still
need to pack my things.”
They talked money.
“The whole trip’s 2,800 miles,” the boy
said. “The van gets twenty miles per gallon on the road, so we’ll burn about
three hundred dollars’ worth of gas. And then we’ll need to rent motel rooms
for at least four or five nights, so I figure—”
“I don’t do motels,” Levi interjected.
“I tent camp in parks and cook my own meals on a propane stove; it saves a lot
of money.”
The boy was silent for a moment. Then he
said, “I guess I could sleep in the van, but I don’t really know how to cook.”
“We can split the cost of food,” Levi
said. “I’ll cook and you can clean up afterward; how’s that?”
More silence, this time for about thirty
seconds.
“Are you still there?” Levi said.
“Yeah,” the boy replied, “I’m just
thinking.”
“About what?”
“Are you somebody I can trust? I mean,
I’ve never done this before. How do I know you’re not some kind of psycho?”
Levi drew a breath and then let it out
while he fingered the edge of his cell phone. “I go to college in northern
California. I can show you my university ID. And I’m a good driver—I’ve never
had a ticket—so you don’t have to worry about me. I’ll get you and your van
there safely.”
They traded names and e-mail addresses.
The boy’s name was Terrence DeVine; he lived in east Orlando, not far from the
Orange Blossom Trail.
“I’m moving to San Jose,” he said, “to
live with a friend.”
They agreed Levi’s mom could drop him
off at Terrence’s house at 9:00 a.m. two days hence, a Thursday. “We can hit
the road as soon as I load up my stuff,” Levi said. “We should make it to Alabama
by dinnertime.”
“Sounds good,” Terrence said. “I’ll see
you then.”
***
Levi and Taylor faced each other in a
booth at Taco City in south Cocoa Beach, just a mile from Patrick Air Force
Base, where Taylor’s dad served. The restaurant was a Brevard County
institution; it served tasty Mexican cuisine and draft beer so cold it numbed
the back of your throat on the first swallow. The crowd that night was a mix of
surfers, condo dwellers, young families with kids in high chairs, and
servicemen sporting crew cuts.
Taylor looked nice enough in her short
shorts and a tank top. Her straight brown hair was parted in the middle; it
draped her shoulders. Her dark eyes focused on Levi while she toyed with her
uneaten burrito.
“This is both our responsibilities,” she
said. “I can’t believe you’re running off to California while I’m stuck here
with this…situation.”
Levi lowered his gaze and rubbed his
lips together while his brain churned. Why hadn’t he used a condom? He’d never
even asked Taylor if she was on the pill before they started having sex. He’d
just assumed as much, and how stupid was that?
“I’m on scholarship,” he told Taylor. “I
can’t just not show up.”
Taylor glanced here and there. Then she
said, “You could enroll at UCF’s campus in Cocoa. At least that way you’d be
here when the baby arrives in April.”
Levi shook his head. “It’s not going to
happen.”
“Why?”
“Stanford’s one of the best schools in
the country. I won’t walk away from there just because you’re pregnant.”
Taylor squirmed on her bench while she
twirled a strand of her hair around a finger. “You’re dumping this whole thing
on me, you know, and it’s not fair.”
Levi wasn’t in the mood to argue, so he
didn’t respond to Taylor’s last remark. Instead, he told her, “I’m leaving
tomorrow, but I’ll call you from the road Friday night. Think again about an
abortion; I’ll pay half.”
Taylor didn’t say anything; she only
stared out a window at traffic passing on A-1-A.
Purchase
NineStar Press | Amazon | Smashwords | Barnes & Noble | Kobo
Meet the Author
Jere’ M. Fishback is a former journalist and trial lawyer who now writes fiction full time. He lives with his partner Greg on a barrier island on Florida’s Gulf Coast. When he’s not writing, Jere’ enjoys reading, playing his guitar, jogging, swimming laps, fishing, and watching sunsets from his deck overlooking the Intracoastal Waterway.Website | Facebook
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9/25 Love Bytes
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