I'm here late because John Mastick gave me a call to alert me to the fact that I missed his post--which I didn't, because it wasn't here when I opened the threads, but it took long enough for me to get through the first that he posted in the gap.
Anyway, I was curious as to what this thread was about, and now having read it I'm going to give my own.
Yeah, you didn't think there was a story behind M. J. Young, did you? Well, there is.
I was always Mark Young, but my mother said the world would have a lot of Mark Youngs in it so I should use my middle initial. Thus my legal signature reads Mark J. Young, and I was known as Mark Young, or Mark. (Actually in college the girls used to call me "Mark J. _______", with sometimes complimentary and sometimes derogatory last names, but that's faded into the mists--I'm not certain whether even Mr. Clean would have remembered that.)
After college, I got a job in radio, where I was Mark Young on the air for five years. Sometime around the fourth I was chatting with the associate editor of the local newspaper (they printed our newsletter), and we came up with the idea of me writing a few pieces of satire for his paper--which I did, and they were published. However, to distance the satirist in the paper from the Bible teacher/musician/DJ on the radio, those were bylined M. Joseph Young. That was the beginning of my writing portfolio.
It got more complicated, because I was still writing music under Mark J. Young, but when I wrote Multiverser I decided to keep the nom de plume. I then started posting stuff on the Internet, and it was almost haphazard what name I posted. The Multiverser stuff, including the Temporal Anomalies materials, was always M. Joseph Young; the song lyrics and some of the Bible stuff was Mark J. Young. I had gotten an AOL screen name of MarkJYoung, and so when I used it for my D&D stuff I posted it as "Mark Young's Dungeons & Dragons Materials" because of the screen name that identified the web site.
Then I wrote Morality and Consequences: Overlooked Gaming Essentials, the first article I had published here at Gaming Outpost. I expected there to be discussion of it on the forum, so I had to register on the forum. How, though, would I register?
If I registered as Mark Young, no one would connect me to the M. Joseph Young, author of Multiverser; and a substantial part of why I was here at all was to let people know about Multiverser.
If, though, I registered as M. Joseph Young, it might dissociate me from the Dungeons & Dragons materials, which I knew was good stuff that was going to catch the eye of many gamers (and it was eventually listed in Knights of the Dinner Table, so it has done so).
Mark Joseph Young was just too much to use for a screen name.
I thought perhaps if I used M. J. Young, it would connect to both the Mark Young and the M. Joseph Young materials, and people would recognize it as short for whichever they knew.
It backfired entirely. Now I am known to uncounted gamers as MJ, a name I've never used except on Internet communications. They call me this at conventions. Many of them don't know that I'm either of those two other people.
So I'm M. J. Young, and several other people as well.
It's a good thing I'm a role playing gamer. I know how to be several different people. I've even got multiple signatures.
--M. J. Young