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Memphis writer Chanelle Benz shares her current reading list

- Maria Browning PHOTO BY KIM NEWMONEY SUBMITTED

Chapter16.org

This Q&A with novelist Chanelle Benz launches a new occasional feature at Chapter 16, focused on the reading lives of prominent Tennessean­s. We’re calling it “The Glorious Pastime” in a nod to the well-known words of Nobel laureate Wislawa Szymborska, who wrote, “I’m old-fashioned and think that reading books is the most glorious pastime that humankind has yet devised.”

Chanelle Benz, who teaches at Rhodes College, published her first short story collection, “The Man Who Shot Out My Eye Is Dead,” in 2017. The book was named one of Electric Literature’s 15 Best Short Story Collection­s that year, and the Chicago Review of Books wrote, “Benz pulls the rug out from under you in almost every story, both in expectatio­n bending and in her gut-wrenching narrations.”

“The Gone Dead,” Benz’s 2019 debut novel, explores a family mystery in the Mississipp­i Delta. The Washington Post praised it as “a startling work that will set your skin tingling and interrupt your sleep.” Entertainm­ent Weekly said Benz “captures human interactio­n with the polish of a seasoned dramatist, armed with a bevy of tools — a feel for smooth dialogue; a rich sense of place; a knowledge of history and its impact on individual­s, families, and communitie­s — that charge her words with authentici­ty.”

Benz answered

Chapter 16 via email.

Chapter 16: What book are you currently reading, and what led you to choose it?

Benz: I’m reading Miriam Toews’ “A Complicate­d Kindness” and Molly Caldwell Crosby’s “The American Plague.” I loved Toews’ book “Women Talking” and wanted to read more of her work. I also wanted something that I could sink into and tear through. “A Complicate­d Kindness” is the story of a darkly wry teenager navigating the strangenes­s of growing up in a Mennonite town. “The American Plague” is about the yellow fever epidemic in Memphis. Oddly, I started researchin­g that epidemic just before questions from

COVID-19 hit.

Q: Is there a book you want to read that you never seem to get around to?

A: I want to read Eric Foner’s “Reconstruc­tion: America’s Unfinished Revolution, 1863-1877,” but it’s a mammoth book and I need the time and (mental) space to give it. (Impossible with no childcare!) I was taught so little about that period in our history that almost everything I learn about it feels like a revelation. Even what I’ve learned lately about Memphis history directly following the Civil War has been eye-opening.

Q: Is there a scene or a passage from a book — fiction or nonfiction — that haunts you?

There’s a scene in the story “Midnight Zone” from Lauren Groff’s “Florida,” where a mother who is stranded with her young boys in an old hunting camp has a concussion and is trying not to fall asleep. She’s staring at her boys while night falls, and there’s a surreal scene where she feels like she leaves her body and moves around the forest. The strangenes­s of her urges and fears is so human, but what takes over is more than just human. I think a lot about how the passage was constructe­d and the eerie thrill it gave me when I first read it.

Q: What’s the next book on your “to read” list?

A: I have a few: “Felon” by Reginald Dwayne Betts, “The Memory Police” by Yoko Ogawa, and “Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiment­s” by Saidiya Hartman.

For more local book coverage, please visit Chapter16.org, an online publicatio­n of Humanities Tennessee.

 ??  ?? Author Chanelle Benz.
Author Chanelle Benz.
 ??  ?? “The Gone Dead” by Chanelle Benz.
“The Gone Dead” by Chanelle Benz.

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