BENJAMIN PERCY  
 

 

Ben's profile of John Irving will appear in the April 23rd issue of TIME magazine.

Ben -- and his sister Jennifer Percy -- have both been named 2012 NEA fellows.

Ben is adapting his novel The Wilding into a screenplay for director Guillermo Arriaga (Babel, 21 Grams)

A profile of Ben recently appeared in The Oregonian.

The Wilding wins the 2011 Society of Midlands Authors Award for Fiction

The Gotham Group buys film rights to Red Moon. Click here to read the article in Variety.

Ben is excited to report that he has sold his next novel, Red Moon, to Grand Central / Hachette, where he will be working with editor Helen Atsma.

The Wilding received a starred review from Publishers Weekly. "A contemporary Deliverance."

Ben scaled and hammocked the night in a 250-ft old growth Douglas fir. His article "Taking Tree-Hugging to New Heights" was featured in the October 9, 2010 edition of The Wall Street Journal. Click here to read.

Click here to read Ben's article "Home Improvement: Revision as Renovation" from Poets & Writers magazine.

USA Today has listed the illustrated adaptation of Refresh, Refresh as one of the top ten comics/graphic novels of the year.

Dodge dropped off a one-ton Ram at Ben's house. He writes about the experience in the Esquire. Click here to read the article.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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FAQ

 



 

 

Before contacting Ben, please review the FAQ below.

Feel free to email me at benjamin.percy@gmail.com at any time. I will do my best to respond as soon as possible.

Follow Ben on Twitter at www.twitter.com/Benjamin_Percy

For rights information or other business matters, please contact my agent Katherine Fausset directly at Curtis Brown Ltd.

All readings and lectures should be arranged through Alison Granuci at the Blue Flower Arts speakers agency.

 

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS:

1. Will you read my manuscript?

Ben is extraordinarily busy teaching, chasing writing deadlines, and trying to be a good husband and father. Under no circumstances will he read a manuscript sent to him. If you would like his critical advice, he would be happy to workshop your writing at one of the many conferences he teaches at every year. See his readings/appearances page for details.

2. Will you recommend me to your agent?

Ben has recommended some of his closest friends, without success. His endorsement will not help.

3. What advice do you have for somebody trying to break into the writing business?

Read your brains out, write your brains out. This is a long, painful apprenticeship and nothing will come easily. Talent will only take you so far. Success comes from persistence and ass-in-chair time.

4. What do you think about the MFA in creative writing?

You don't need one to become a writer. But a graduate program can provide you with community and time, which in many cases accelerates the growth of a writer so that you might figure out in three years what you would have on your own in seven.

5. How did you break into magazine writing?

I have no journalistic experience. I began publishing fiction with the slicks and from there they asked me to write nonfiction for them. One magazine gig has led to another.