The Long Journey to Jake Palmer by James L. Rubart |
I’ve long enjoyed reading Jim’s books, so I was excited to
see this new one.
Let’s begin with the
summary:
What if there was a place where
everything wrong in your life could be fixed?
Corporate trainer Jake Palmer
coaches people to see deeper into themselves—yet he barely knows himself
anymore. Recently divorced and weary of the business life, Jake reluctantly
agrees to a lake-house vacation with friends, hoping to escape for ten days.
When he arrives, Jake hears the
legend of Willow Lake—about a lost corridor that leads to a place where one’s
deepest longings will be fulfilled.
Jake scoffs at the idea, but can’t
shake a sliver of hope that the corridor is real. And when he meets a man who
mutters cryptic speculations about the corridor, Jake is determined to find the
path, find himself, and fix his crumbling life.
But the journey will become more
treacherous with each step Jake takes.
And now, my review:
I savored this book. I was hooked from the opening pages and
by the middle of chapter two I was enthralled. Jim didn’t save the “good stuff”—revelations
for readers—until the end, but peppered takeaway throughout.
One of the themes in the
story is the ability to be objective about ourselves and see our identity
through the haze of lies or fears we believe about ourselves.
Jake Palmer is a corporate trainer. He holds seminars on “reading
each other’s labels” and finding out “what’s in your bottle.” But what the
author did was address the universal hunt for our own
identities. Who are we, as individuals? And what stands in our way from seeing
ourselves as we truly are and then living in that reality? Occasionally others
see us better that we see ourselves. They see our strengths and abilities more
clearly than we do.
Sometimes toxic shame gets in the way. (Toxic shame is shame
for who you are; basic shame is feeling badly about what you’ve done.) Jake
grew up being told from authority figures, whom children tend to believe
without question, that he wasn’t enough. This story is about him coming to
grips with that lie because ironically the whole time he’s been coaxing people
out of their hiding places into being who they truly are, he’s been hiding.
Another universal theme: people can get tangled up in regrets. These paralyze us and
hold us in one place, preoccupying our time and energy. We sometimes want to go
back to a certain moment and change it, and the fact that that’s impossible
doesn’t keep us from ruminating on what we’d do differently or berating
ourselves for not doing something differently in that moment. Those regrets and ruminations can
be based in something we did, or something others did to us. That entanglement
can hold us captive for years, even our whole lives, keeping us from living out our
destinies or seeing our worth. The hook in this story is the promise of a place where Jake could go
where what was wrong in his life could be made right. He could get back what he’d
lost.
The author, like life, presents readers with a choice: keep
hiding or face our stuff and learn to move forward without shame. But there
will be a fight, and the choice to do battle is only the first difficult thing to overcome.
I’ve come to expect Jim’s work to include the supernatural, which this novel does around the mysterious corridor and person he finds there. I also loved the Superman references; the NW lake setting; the
Narnian references, the friendship group; the affirmation-based story; the
psychological study; the battle to choose hope; and the call to discover,
embrace, and walk in our true identities.
This was one of my favorite reads this year. A life-changing
novel that will stick with readers long after they finish.
Highly recommended.