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.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

 

THE LANGUAGE OF ELK

 

"With his debut collection, The Language of Elk, Benjamin Percy takes a sledgehammer to the myths of the West. These stories, red in tooth and nail, brim with the primal charm of a writer putting the pedal to the metal. Buy this book, crack the spine, and get pummeled by Percy."

Elwood Reid, Author of What Salmon Know, D.B., Midnight Sun, and If I Don't Six


 

"This debut collection of stories,The Language of Elk, assembles its cast from the mountain towns and low life taverns and high desert ranches of Oregon - a state that in isolated pockets remains a still-unfinished place, the frontier.

Here nature exists as a source of wonder and a force to be conquered. Here myths haunt the moss-laden woods and Benjamin Percy shines his light on them, revealing bearded ladies and Bigfoot and marijuana colonies and elk hunting ranches and haunted Indian burial sites, the underside of contemporary western America.

With a salty mystical voice that partners the landscape and a vision as wild as his characters, Percy explores a world of surprising violence and gentleness, hilarity and heartbreak, loveliness and ugliness, and in doing so emerges as a beautifully raw voice of the West."

---Carnegie Mellon University Press

PRAISE:

Friends of literature, please welcome the new master of the American grotesque, Benjamin Percy. These eight stories in The Language of Elk are a pitch-perfect circus of original insanity, a modern-day Oregon wasteland over which anvils fly and in which bearded ladies can mend the broken soul and through which walks Bigfoot and those whose lives he has ruined in his years avoiding capture.  Mr. Percy's talent is even more monstrous than Bigfoot himself--epic, beautiful, shocking, funny, brutal, brilliant--and when this book has torn out your heart and fed it to the crows, don't be surprised if you feel grateful and want to go through that all over again.

--Mike Magnuson, author of of Lummox: The Evolution of a Man, The Fire Gospels and The Right Man for the Job

In "The Language of Elk", men ­ and creatures ­ stagger in a no man¹s land between wildness and domesticity, jealous, cracked, burning to be acknowledged.  Like the flaming projectiles his protagonists often launch into the sky, these stories crackle with energy and violence and a furious beauty.  Benjamin Percy is a force.

--Anthony Doerr, Author of The Shell Collector and About Grace

The Language of Elk, made of equal parts pain, comedy and sweetness, is a book that will leave you gasping and wanting more. Each of the stories contained herein is a sharply-written, laugh-out-loud barn-burner, and Benjamin Percy is the best new writer to step into the spotlight in years.

--Brady Udall, author of The MIracle Life of Edgar Mint and Letting Loose the Hounds

 

REVIEWS:

To read the Capital Times review of The Language of Elk click here.

To read the Compulsive Reader review of The Language of Elk click here.

To read the Sun Oasis review of The Language of Elk click here.

The author is gratefully represented by Katherine Fausset of Curtis Brown Ltd.

 

NOTE: The Langauge of Elk is currently out of print.