Synopses & Reviews
Caught in the muddle of modern life, eyes gazing at the middle distance, the characters in
Silent Retreats search, down roads paved by custom and dotted by the absurd, for escape, refuge, or, at least, merciful diversion.
Many of the men in Philip Deaver's stories, having drifted out of their native Illinois to the far corners, find comfort from empty jobs and blank relationships in healing, often hilarious, seductions. In "Why I Shacked Up With Martha" a distracted DC executive pierces the gray blur of his glass box on Dupont Circle with illicit, painfully superficial notes passed to his beautiful, liberated coworker. In "Marguerite Howe," a businessman from Texas at a cocktail party in New Haven accosts his hostess, blindly convinced that she is the woman of his college day-dreams at the University of Virginia. And, in Nebraska, a defeated legal aid attorney escapes the cold wind of failure and a near suicidal woman in the deep warmth of "Fiona's Rooms."
Other characters, still within the radius of central Illinois, tread through the familiar scenery of the past, measuring with landmarks of memory the distance, and yet the circularity, time has wrought in their lives. In the title story, Martin Wolf--overcome with tears during the morning commute and craving connection and the cleansing rituals of his Catholic youth--learns from the words of a parish priest, crackling through the lines of a pay phone as cars screech by on Roosevelt Road, that silence has become self-indulgent. And in "Infield," Carl Landen savors the well-ordered tableau of the Pony League diamond where he played shortstop and where his son now plays that position. Recalling the ache in the shoulder after an overhand throw, seeing in his mind the figure of his father intruding at the edge of the field, he relaxes the pain of generations, the soreness that comes from knowing a town too well.
A well-known theme of Philip Deaver's stories is "what happened to men after what happened to women." The stories in Silent Retreats trace the tentative journeys of men as they redefine who they are in a changed world while still coping with memory and desire in the old ways. Above all, these stories chronicle a search for absolution--for the elusive freedom lurking among the very syllables of the word.
Review
"Like all good fiction, the stories in this first collection are true. The characters, mostly men on the verge of a pre-midlife crisis, are caught in the muddle of marriage, the frailness of tentative friendships, and the ordinariness of life. Often they try to work out their own redemption, with predictably comic results. In the title story, a systems analyst—overcome with existential doubt and longing for a time when interventions were possible and solutions existed—finds out from his parish priest that silence is now considered self-indulgent. The language, especially the dialogue, is clean and well-lit; the narration is seemly. This is a fine debut." Reviewed by Daniel Weiss, Virginia Quarterly Review (Copyright 2006 Virginia Quarterly Review)
Review
"Written in vivid, spare prose, the best of these stories linger, sad and profound, like songs you sing to yourself.”--New York Times
Review
"Permeated with finely crafted writing, grounded in the solidity of objects and places realized through well-textured description and resonant dialogue, this debut makes a wise, quietly provocative statement about commonplace tragedy and the ironies and fragility of relationships."--Publishers Weekly
Review
"Like all good fiction, the stories in this first collection are true. . . . The language, especially the dialogue, is clean and well-lit; the narration is seemly. This is a fine debut."--Virginia Quarterly Review
Review
Deaver offers yet another snapshot of the chasm that yawns between Christianity and Christendom in Silent Retreats."--Books and Religion
Review
"A triumph . . . a noteworthy introduction."--Kirkus Reviews
Review
"The style of these eleven stories is rich—full of talk, imagery, and wit."--Choice
Review
"This collection . . . is quite impressive."--Chicago Tribune
Review
"Deaver's Silent Retreats is a collection of deeply felt stories, rooted in the American landscape."--San Francisco Review
About the Author
Philip F. Deaver has held fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and Bread Loaf. His short fiction has appeared in Prize Stories: The O. Henry Awards 1988 and has been recognized in Best American Short Stories 1995 and The Pushcart Prize XX. Deaver teaches in the English Department at Rollins College and is permanent writer in residence there. He is also on the fiction faculty in the Spalding University brief residency MFA program.