Author Archives: Jacssisters

Multiple Online Personality Disorder

Jim Perrin does lead a merry dance through the personal fiefdom (as he seems to regard it) that is the Internet, and we are most grateful that someone else can help us analyse his online activities more deeply than we are able to do. One of our perceptive well-wishers has an interest in the recently described condition M.O.P.D., and has made a brief study of it; and as a follower of our site he has not failed to pick up on our accusations that Jim Perrin has written under pseudonyms. He too has recognized the patterns which he considers point to this likelihood. Very kindly he has sent us this contribution.

He writes:

‘Let me prefix the following by saying that the lawyers insist on the term ‘I (or we) believe’ being coupled with every assertion regarding Jim Perrin for which hard proof is not provided. In the present matter such proof is not easy to come by — but it certainly exists and could be assembled with (and by some parties of my acquaintance without) the co-operation of certain website operators, internet service providers, and email services; but really, need I bother? Continue reading

No laughing matter

It may seem from some of our posts that we are having a little fun at Jim Perrin’s expense. It is true: sometimes we cannot resist teasing, as by his actions and pronouncements — whether under his own name or, as we believe, using one of his several aliases — he so frequently engenders this response.

However, our underlying concern is anything but humour. The fact is that we are not able to write of all his darker deeds (details of which have been shared with us by those he has harmed) without bringing embarrassment or humiliation upon his victims; or worse, that he should find some means of retaliation if he guessed their identity: such is the nature and design of his behaviour. Continue reading

Jim Perrin spitting feathers?

We have just read Helen Macdonald’s critically acclaimed, wildly successful and award-winning book H is for Hawk, in which the author, an experienced falconer, relates how, following her father’s sudden death, and by way of self-administered therapy, she acquired and trained a goshawk, allegedly the most thuggish and challenging of raptors to deal with. The book sheds a fascinating light, for the uninitiated, onto the ancient and arcane world of falconry, and imparts a great deal that most will not know about T H White, author of The Goshawk along with his Arthurian romances. Certainly its success will be acknowledged by many a contemporary nature writer… Continue reading