Released at the end of January will be Mr. Breakfast, by Jonathan Carroll and I must say, “This is a rare find, the story a must read!”. Here I was drawn into the world of Graham Patterson, a failing comedian who finds himself in a tattoo parlor, while on the way to a “safe life”, taking a job with his brother, making one of those “life changes” that none of us really want to step into, when we feel that we have failed at something. However, when Patterson happens to pick the one tattoo that will change his life, giving him the ability to switch between two other versions of his life, the trip he thought he was making, gets completely derailed. And, as I continued on in the story, I was reminded of feelings I had when encountering A Christmas Carol (in one of its forms, whether on screen, page) and Stephen King’s 11/22/63.
While Patterson is not met with the “ghost of Christmas past” he does have his tattoo artist, Anna Mae, who learned the Japanese method of irezumi, years later, taught by her master to make what he calls the “breakfast tattoo”, to guide him. Using the magic word that changes depending on the person who has the tattoo, he can go back and forth until he has decided who and where he wants to be. However, there is a limit, there are limits to everything, readers will find, in this tale. During this time Patterson catches photos of his adventure that will, in time, make him revered (in this current life line). And, with the discovery of what will become of this life, success as something other than a comedian, Patterson has a hard time even wanting to take a chance on the others.
However, fate, the cosmos, whatever is the guiding hand of this tattoo will not let him keep the tattoo. Because once Patterson makes the decision on which of the three lives he wants to live, the tattoo disappears as do all his memories about his past lives and the tattoo itself. Everything that ever happened, before. All that will be remembered is the life line of what is. And, though Patterson did gain fame as a comedian in one of these lives, a drastic, harsh, twist of fate quickly tells him that if he stays there his brain will be the size of a pea (I will make you read the book to figure that one out, lol ;)
However, being able to be with the love of his life (the third life line), have the children that she so desperately wanted does not sound so bad to Patterson, but it does not sound so good. And, while there are so many aspects of this book that will lead you to thought, when it comes to what choice Patterson needed to make about his life, I think all he needed, in the end, was a swift kick in the butt by the cosmos (or whatever) and that may be just what he got. Because, when it comes to life, Patterson gets to see things that others, like us, never do.
Like what happens after, to his partner, when they break up, what she says, does, her reaction to the whole event. There are so many things about life and living that we don’t know that we really should know, need to know, to make a decision. Even how we are connected to others, which, nearing the end, becomes a big aspect in the book. And, I think, in the end, we all need a little hand, as that is what Patterson gets, to make his choice. After all, we are only human. I won’t say that he didn’t make his decision, just, that, how could he not?
Jonathan Carroll, however, writes no simple book here. While it is a simple story, really, a man who has to choose between three lives, three different ways his life could have turned out, that kind of decision is complex and, as is the whole story Carroll paints around the premise of the tattoo, a breakfast tattoo. I know readers will love the idea of the author as much as I did and do, a book with a Palaniukish aurora, as you delve into a world where past, present and future combine like the tide, pushing Patterson to choose the best path for himself and others in the world. To make the best possible future for all.