Excerpts

Home and Castle

“Home and Castle,” a new story collection by Tom Benz, won the 2017 Serena McDonald Kennedy Award sponsored by Snake Nation Press. Many of the stories contained in it were previously published by notable literary journals, such as The Madison Review, Mud Season Review and The William and Mary Review. The book will be available in January.

Jacob Appel, author of multiple collections and novels, and winner of numerous awards such as the Hudson Prize, said this: “Thomas Benz’s aptly named collection of taut, riveting short stories, Home and Castle,” offers a window into the lives of men–often middle aged, middle class, middling and muddling–who find their livelihoods, status and families under threat. With a gift for capturing the subtleties of married life and the pains of lost social standing, Benz carves out a niche as a perceptive heir to the best of John O’Hara, John Updike and Paula Fox. His characters are in crisis, and his prose resonates with such deep authenticity that their crises become our crises. Home and Castle is a first rate collection that grapples with the toxic anxieties of contemporary America and tackles tough questions head-on–but with a blend of insight, empathy, and humor. This is a major literary debut, one not to be missed.”

Peter Ferry, author of Travel Writing and Old Heart, winner of the 2015 Chicago Writers Association Book of the Year Award, said “Tom Benz’s marvelous stories of life in the American suburbs will remind you of John Cheever but with a subjective empathy and wry vulnerability that are wrenching.”

Abby Geni, author of The Last Animal and The Light Keepers, winner of the 2016 Barnes and Noble Discover Great New Writers Award for fiction, said “Thomas Benz is a powerful, lyrical writer, and his work offers unique insight into the mess and beauty of the human condition.”

Introduction

My writing tends to gravitate toward certain themes: misunderstanding, romantic discord, the struggles of being a parent, conflict with a community’s prevailing ethos, and the characters’ frequent sense of exclusion from an accepted place in society. I like fictional situations where people are placed under stress, often due to their own mistakes, so that they end up reacting in a pivotal and unforeseen manner.

So here you will find: a guy unwittingly drops a torrid love note in the church collection basket; a jealous husband finds a unique way of seeking revenge against a romantic rival during a Christmas nativity play; a character who runs an independent wake up call service has trouble getting a crucial call of his own; a message written on a dollar bill and released into circulation somehow finds its way into the right hands; a father who plans to miss his daughter’s birthday party seeks the counsel of a friend who specializes in the “perfect excuse,” a condo owner is unwillingly elected president of the association’s board with disastrous consequences, a beleaguered character finds refuge in the treehouse of a neighbor and becomes an unintended spy; a man who is mistaken for someone else decides to impersonate him following the clues in the conversation. It may be tragedy of a sort but only in a minor key, the parried slings and arrows of modern relationship.

I enjoy the stuff of ordinary life, which, through a sequence of escalating difficulties, suddenly becomes remarkable and strange. I like depictions of the world that attempt to balance minor tragedies with irony and an occasional touch of humor. Also, the writers I most admire pay attention to the sound and rhythm of words, take risks with language and metaphor. It’s wonderful when the great ones create a structure of imagery beneath the surface of a story that seems to integrate it in some mysterious way.

Much has been said about the capacity of fiction to generate empathy for other points of view and science appears to bear that out. In an era of increasing tribalism, few traits are more needed than the one which compels us to hear the other voice, feel the unusual or contradictory experience. We need not agree with different perceptions but must be able to get to the root of them before any sort of understanding can take place.

By its very nature, fiction also helps cultivate and preserve language as the primary means of apprehending the world. While the proliferation of movies and videos and photographs and emojis are a marvelous addition to our lives, only language enables the recipient to bring his or her full imagination to the encounter. A novel or collection of stories uniquely engages a reader to construct a world right along with the author, to infuse what’s been created with a unique filter, to make the abstract visible in one’s own mind. If a “picture is worth a thousand words,” it cannot do quite the same thing as those words. In our rush to compress, to abbreviate, to go faster, to live more and more, this might be something we should not allow ourselves to forget.

~Tom Benz

About The Author

THOMAS BENZ graduated with a B.A. in English from the University of Notre Dame. He recently won the 2017 Serena McDonald Kennedy Award for a short story collection called “Home and Castle.” The book is to be published by Snake Nation Press in the fall. In the last several years, he has had fifteen stories  (…read more)