


He'd probably have ended up with a throwaway job that felt unsatisfying for reasons he didn't understand, and he'd take drugs more for recreation than escape. As a surly punk rocker, he hated the police on principle. He'd probably deny and minimize and play off the stuff he saw as being something less than what it was. So as to going mad, no, that doesn't feel like Vic to me. They see parts of themselves in each other, but in each case, it's the "path not taken" that they're yearning for, or at least curious about.

The attraction between Vic and Crash has less to do with sex and more to do with mirroring. The function of Crash in the series is not to provide relationship tension between Vic and Jacob, but rather to demonstrate what Vic might have been, had his life gone a different direction early on. Essentially, he'd be a lot like Crash in certain ways. Jordan Castillo Price I think about that a lot, because Camp Hell was such a formative experience for Vic, and I think he would have been entirely different if not for the …more I think about that a lot, because Camp Hell was such a formative experience for Vic, and I think he would have been entirely different if not for the coping behaviors he learned there. Jordan is best known as the author of the Ps圜op series, an unfolding tale of paranormal mystery and suspense starring Victor Bayne, a gay medium who's plagued by ghostly visitations.more Any disembodied noises, she’s decided, will be blamed on the ice maker. She’s settled in a 1910 Cape Cod near Lake Michigan with tons of character and a plethora of bizarre spiders.

Author and artist Jordan Castillo Price writes paranormal sci-fi thrillers colored by her time in the Midwest, from inner city Chicago, to various cities across southern Wisconsin. Jordan is best known as the author of the Ps圜op series, an unfolding tale of paranormal mystery and suspense starring Victor Bayne, a gay medium who's plagued by ghostly visitations.
