J Thomas BrownPlace has always been central to J. Thomas Brown's writing, whether exploring worlds that have vanished or imagining those yet to come. His early life was shaped by constant moving. His father's wanderlust carried the family up and down the American ast Coast, across the ocean to Sweden and England, and into a series of remarkable homes: a miller's house at an old gristmill, a converted barn, an Olympic gold medalist's residence on the Isle of Lidingö in the Stockholm archipelago, an English manor in Kent, and a Pennsylvania fieldstone house once used by George Washington as an infirmary.Settling in Richmond, Virginia, Brown tempered his own wanderlust and focused on writing. During this period he became an oneironaut and practiced lucid dreaming. Using dreams from the journal he kept, he wrote several short stories and later unified them into the novella Cutting Through. The title is taken from the Buddha's Diamond Sutra which refers to the sharp indestructible sword of transcendental wisdom severing ties to illusions, falsehoods, and attachments that obscure the true nature of reality. He has co-produced local access television programs, coordinated poetry readings at the Richmond Public Library, and served as editor and webmaster for The Virginia Writers Project. A dedicated member of The Virginia Writers Club, Brown continues to craft stories deeply rooted in place, drawing on a lifetime of movement and observation to create narratives that bridge past, present, and future. Read More Read Less
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