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A Journey Toward Compassion
Posted by Literary-Titan

Speedy: Hurled Through Havoc tells your story, transforming a life of circus roads, painted panels, horses, recovery, and father-son reckoning into a reflective memoir about forgiveness, craft, and finding peace with the past. What was the most difficult part of writing honestly about your father?
The most difficult part was learning how to tell the truth without turning the story into an accusation. As a child, you only see your wounds. You don’t yet understand the fears, limitations, disappointments, and emotional inheritances your parents may have carried themselves. My father was a complicated man—hardworking, gifted in many ways, but emotionally distant and often trapped inside his own frustrations and limitations.
For years, I viewed many of those experiences through the lens of resentment. Writing the book forced me to revisit painful memories honestly while also asking myself deeper questions: Who was he before he became my father? What dreams did he abandon? What pain did he never know how to express?
That changed everything.
The writing process became less about blame and more about understanding. I realized forgiveness doesn’t necessarily erase damage, but it can free you from carrying the weight of bitterness for the rest of your life. In many ways, the book became a journey toward compassion—not only for him, but for myself.
How did your years as a traveling artist shape the structure and style of the memoir?
The road shaped everything about the way I write. Traveling through carnivals, circuses, fairs, small towns, back lots, and endless highways exposed me to an incredible variety of people and environments. Life on the road moves in episodes, almost like scenes in a film, and that naturally influenced the structure of the memoir.
The book isn’t written from the perspective of someone who lived a predictable life in one place. It unfolds through movement, encounters, visual memories, conversations, breakdowns, temporary friendships, strange situations, and moments of revelation that happened while constantly in transit.
Being a visual artist also deeply affected my storytelling style. I tend to write cinematically and emotionally through imagery, atmosphere, texture, and detail. I see scenes almost like paintings unfolding on canvas. Whether describing a muddy circus lot at sunrise, the smell of enamel paint in a sign shop, or the silence between a father and son, I want the reader to feel immersed inside the environment rather than simply observing it from a distance.
Travel also taught me to notice humanity. When you spend decades crossing America and living among performers, laborers, horsemen, mechanics, drifters, and dreamers, you begin to understand that every person is carrying an unseen story.
The book is filled with circus people, horsemen, mentors, and fellow travelers. Who had the greatest influence on your sense of craft and character?
It’s difficult to name only one because different people shaped different parts of my life. The horsemen probably influenced my character more deeply than anyone else. Good horse trainers teach patience, consistency, humility, and emotional control because horses immediately respond to what is genuine inside you. You cannot fake calmness, confidence, or leadership around them.
The older circus craftsmen and sign painters influenced my sense of discipline and workmanship. Many of those men came from a generation where your reputation depended entirely on the quality of your work and whether you kept your word. They taught me that mastery is built through repetition, observation, humility, and endurance—not shortcuts.
There were also mentors whose influence came simply through the way they carried themselves in difficult environments. Some had almost nothing materially, yet possessed dignity, humor, generosity, and resilience. Those lessons stayed with me far longer than technical skills ever did.
Oddly enough, even some of the most broken people I encountered became teachers. Watching lives destroyed by addiction, bitterness, ego, or poor choices forced me to examine my own direction and eventually pushed me toward recovery and personal growth.
What do you hope readers take away from your story about forgiveness, family, and becoming whole?
More than anything, I hope readers realize that healing is possible, even when the past feels tangled, painful, or unresolved. Many people carry silent resentment toward family members, toward themselves, or toward life circumstances they never fully processed. That emotional weight quietly shapes their decisions, relationships, confidence, and sense of identity for decades.
I hope the book encourages people to look honestly at their own stories with compassion instead of denial or blame.
Forgiveness does not mean pretending painful things never happened. It means refusing to let those wounds continue defining your future. Becoming whole often begins when we stop running from our own history and finally learn how to integrate it into something meaningful.
I also hope readers come away with a renewed appreciation for creativity, craftsmanship, imagination, and the value of authentic human connection. In a world that often feels increasingly distracted and disconnected, I believe there is still tremendous healing power in storytelling, art, honesty, and shared humanity.
Ultimately, the memoir is not just about circus life or traveling the country. It is about searching for home—not necessarily a physical place, but an inner peace that can only come through understanding, forgiveness, purpose, and self-acceptance.
Author Links: GoodReads | Linktree | Amazon
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Business of Art Reference, Circus Performing Arts, Dave "Letterfly" Knoderer, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Speedy: Hurled Through Havoc, story, Theatre Biographies, writer, writing


