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“Thousand Yard Stare Into the Future”

Video of January 15, 2023 reading at the Luigart Cafe in Lexington, Kentucky

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By James b. Wells

JAMES B. WELLS is a retired criminology and criminal justice professor in the School of Justice Studies in the College of Justice, Safety, and Military Science at Eastern Kentucky University, and is the recipient of the 2025 Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences John Howard Award, an award given intermittently, upon significant demand, to recognize an individual who has made significant and sustained contributions to the practice of corrections. A former carpenter, soldier, and correctional officer in a super-maximum-security prison and later as a researcher/planner assisting architects in prison design, he has multiple degrees, including an M.S. in Criminal Justice, a Ph.D. in Research, and an MFA in Creative Writing. He’s authored or co-authored over sixty-five books, chapters, articles, and essays, as well as over a hundred and fifty research reports for various local, state, and federal agencies. Recent essays from his research and memoir work appear or are forthcoming in Collateral Journal, About Place Journal, Wild Roof Journal, Military Experience and the Arts, The Wrath-Bearing Tree, Shift, Proud to be: Writing by American Warriors, Trajectory Journal, and From Pen to Page III: More Writings from the Bluegrass Writers Coalition.

His investigative memoir about his father's still CIA-classified death in Vietnam in 1965, titled Because: A CIA Coverup and a Son’s Odyssey to Find the Father He Never Knew, will be launched on Father's Day weekend, 2025. Links to publications, presentations, trailers, social media, blog, and other information can be found at https://jamesbwells.com. James enjoys spending much of his leisure time with his spouse on their Lexington, Kentucky farm located on the palisades of the Kentucky River, where he is an organic gardener and beekeeper.

5 replies on ““Thousand Yard Stare Into the Future””

This touched me so…I adored my Uncle Jack. I don’t know how I got so close to someone who was always so far away. He and mom were close, maybe that’s why. He always brought me a treasure home from somewhere in the world. I still have the Japanese girl in a red and glass case. Better sign off…I’m about to cry.

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Thanks cuz. I’ve been amazed at all of the things he shipped to relatives here in the US and how many of them eventually come to my knowledge. I must have forgot about him giving you the Japanese girl in the red case. I even had a curio shop owner in Florida who bought one of Jack’s footlockers in an auction track me down from the stenciling info Jack had painted on the footlocker in the 1950s. It’s as if he means to communicate he’s still with us in some way. Love ya lots

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first off, can’t believe i’ve never seen that picture of your dad before! i know this is an old entry but i’m just now seeing it…. secondly, i still can’t believe you let me keep that one footlocker of your dad’s. you’ve no idea how much i cherish it. i keep all the old family stuff in it. it’s one of my ‘if there was a fire’ items, if you know what i mean. ❤

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“I don’t know how I got so close to someone who was always so far away.”

well i certainly know what you mean, considering he was gone before i was born and yet i feel so connected to him. i like to think it was because gramps carried so much of jack with him his whole life that i got a piece of him from gramps. jack is 100% the first person i’m hunting down in heaven!

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