
Ichabod Brooks
Would you believe he first appeared on this blog in April of 2013? Well he did and here’s the post.
Originally Ichabod Jones, he started as a name that I couldn’t get out of my head. I decided to peek down the rabbit hole after a few weeks of wondering why I liked that name. Not much happened for several months, but one day a story evolved around Ichabod. He was a loner in a world where people lived above a toxic cloud. He was one of the few who could ‘dive’ into the old world and not be poisoned by the pollution. So he would take assignments to recover items for people. This was going to be a book where Ichabod got involved in rebels, survivors on the surface, and the truth behind the fate of the world. It never made it beyond a brief explanation in one of my many notebooks. So our apathetic hero remained in slumber until I wrote the poem in April and forgot him again.
Bring us to earlier this year and I found myself in the darker parts of Legends of Windemere. Heroic spirits were being battered, Stephen was having sadistic fun, hearts were being stomped, and I really needed something more simple and upbeat to write. I saw my son playing and got the idea of a short story where the hero was a father. At first, he was going to travel with the kid like ‘Lone Wolf & Cub‘. I’d never read that, but I knew of the basic concept. Then everything changed by having the hero become a family man that is simply trying to earn a living. At this point I wanted to make the man before I settled on the adventure and life details.
I remembered Ichabod Jones and changed him into the middle-aged father/husband with a reputation for taking on dangerous jobs. The personality came about as writing, but I started with the idea that he was dedicated to his family. He talks and thinks about them quite often. Even a part of his contract involves allowing him to claim a souvenir for his son. This was the new hero of Windemere, who wasn’t going to have epic struggles like Luke Callindor. He was only out to make a living and sometimes his assignments went a little out of whack.
Now for anybody who remembers a few months ago, Ichabod Jones was revealed to already exist in a comic book. Entirely different character and world, but why take the risk? So I took suggestions and votes where ‘Brooks’ took the gold medal. I’ve gotten used to calling him Ichabod Brooks and I like what he’s become. How many adventures will he have? I don’t know. It really depends on the reception, but he might become a summer release and, if he gets enough traction, I’ll try to make the next one a compilation of short stories. So fingers are crossed that Ichabod is greeted with positivity and can be a recurring hero for me to work with.
2023 Thoughts– I made the above post long ago before his short story came out. It would be a year later that I published The Life & Times of Ichabod Brooks. People really enjoyed the character and I loved writing him. He stood out from my other heroes due to him showing his age and being focused on providing for family. Ichabod wasn’t trying to save the world or defeat a great evil. He took jobs for money because his family had to eat and bills don’t pay themselves. Will I ever write the rest of the Ichabod Brooks stories? I don’t know. The books never sold even though people enjoyed his adventures when I posted excerpts. Maybe I’ll get the last 11 that I have notes on finished one day and give him some closure. Only time will tell.




Love that you used the name Ichabod. I had to look it up : Without glory or Where is the glory?
LikeLike
Not sure. The name just came into my head when I was thinking of characters. Didn’t even his design down when it came to me.
LikeLike
It’s Hebrew, of course.
LikeLike
Ichabod is a likable character and you seemed to have fun writing his adventures. I hope he’ll find his audience. He deserves to be read!
LikeLike
Not sure if he ever will at this point. His book was released in 2016. No amount of promos helped even when I could afford them.
LikeLike
Ichabod had great adventures. I would love to see the next stories come out.
LikeLike
Maybe one day. Though, I think I’ll have to be either rich or retired before I can go back to him. So little time to write that I can only stick to the series I’ve been preparing for years.
LikeLiked by 1 person
If Ichabod’s stories are shorter, maybe that would be easier to get a handle on in your current circumstances?
LikeLike
They’re fairly short as it is. Each one was about 30-35 typed pages. The issue is really that my writing time is so limited. I can’t wander into secondary projects like I used to if I want to get the big ones I’ve been tinkering with for decades done. Ichabod is fun to write, but so is Darwin. The latter hasn’t had a chance to see the public yet. The former has and never sold well enough for me to push hard for the sequel. At the very least, I want to finish Darwin’s series before I consider going back to Ichabod.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I hope you do finish the books, Charles.
LikeLike
Maybe one day.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Still one of my favorites. There was so much a reader could relate to with him. I understand about how stories underperform with readers and have about given up being a hit. I like the stories I produce and maybe someone else will too.
LikeLike
There’s a higher chance of Ichabod getting another book than Bedlam though. Just not feeling motivated to use my limited time to give him a second outing that doesn’t perform well.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Makes sense. Maybe he’ll get a cameo somewhere.
LikeLike
Oh, he’s definitely dead from old age by Darwin’s time. That or rightfully retired.
LikeLiked by 1 person