INTERVIEWS:
Writer’s Bone Podcast: In conversation with Daniel F. Ford – Also available on Soundcloud, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and Google Play. Direct link here.
Split Lip Magazine: The Hard Parts, The Genuine Parts: A Conversation with James Charlesworth, by Kaitlyn Andrews-Rice
Brooklyn Rail: James Charlesworth in conversation with Kathleen Rooney
Off the Shelf Television Appearance: In conversation with Virginia Andrews for Danvers Community Access Television
RealClearLife: One Father’s Toxic Masculinity, Insatiable Drive Ruins Thousands of Lives in Debut Novel, by Ariel Scotti
REVIEWS:
Charlesworth’s saga takes a sweeping sideways look at American ambition and even the great American novel. However, the tone is never cynical in this family tragedy. Rather, there is a beautiful sadness and mournful anger as Charlesworth evokes the loss following consequential choices. ~Booklist Starred Review (Michael Ruzicka)
For such an unabashedly polemical first novel, The Patricide of George Benjamin Hill works surprising well, due in large measure to the unremitting intensity of its prose, the unsettling verisimilitude of its characters, and the moral courage at the core of its message. ~New York Journal of Books (Steve Nathans-Kelly)
Charlesworth makes the psychological and emotional pain of these children very real. He takes us inside the minds of these young adults, depicting them as a kind of nightmare world of confusion, doubt, and rage. We see in this novel the emotional toll that absent or loveless parenting can take on children, and it is not pretty… A powerful debut novel for fans of literary fiction. ~Library Journal (Patrick Sullivan)
Fascinating… The author bravely explores the psychological territory of how George’s dreams, schemes and disregard for life impacted his first and second wives as well as his three sons and one daughter… For a reader seeking to learn about the dark side of the American dream as well as being a witness to how ambition can impact men, women and children, The Patricide of George Benjamin Hill by James Charlesworth will be the perfect ride into how one man’s psychology affected his family. ~Fresh Fiction (Svetlana Libenson)
A brilliant send-up of American mythologies. When estranged siblings flock to their wealthy, scandalized father, the poisonous illusion of the American dream, of capitalism and conventional masculinity and familial betrayal, is powerfully exposed. With its thrilling plot and unforgettable characters, The Patricide of George Benjamin Hill is a vital debut novel. ~Laura van den Berg, Author of The Third Hotel
Rife with the mayhem attendant upon corruption and greed, and alight with the ersatz sparkle of American myth-making and self-absorption . . . With this epic entry into the vast field of feckless and appalling father figures, Charlesworth presents one of the most entertaining and utterly spell-binding arguments against the patriarchy ever written. Wild and haunted, it’s a realistic book, yes, but maybe it’s also a horror story in which the scariest monster of all goes by the alias “Dad.” ~Kathleen Rooney, Author of Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk
The eponymous industrialist of James Charlesworth’s debut novel is a bootstrapping striver, a paragon of ruthless certitude, a malevolent Forrest Gump of American capitalism; he’s also the father of grown kids with wrecked lives and serious scores to settle. As Charlesworth tracks their murder-minded convergence on a Midwestern ranch, his winding, precise sentences excavate histories both personal and national to deliver a compressed epic that doubles as a fierce indictment of traditional masculinity. Rollicking, hallucinatory, and deeply felt, The Patricide of George Benjamin Hill is a scorching Oresteia for the twenty-first century. ~Martin Seay, Author of The Mirror Thief
Rapid-fire and dense and muscular. Charlesworth packs his sentences and his characters have [a] grand, epic, fated quality. ~Susan Bernhard, Author of Winter Loon
The Patricide of George Benjamin Hill asks what happens when a family tree is poisoned at the roots. This epic family saga unfolds in clear-eyed and powerful prose, and speaks to both our history and our moment, capturing what’s lost in the search for power. ~James Scott, Author of The Kept
A searing fever-dream of a novel, a sprawling family saga that dramatizes the ruinous consequences of blind ambition and the failings of a patriarch — and of the patriarchy more generally. Charlesworth’s sentences are marvels, and they will carry you in a rush of language toward an unexpected conclusion more narratively and thematically satisfying than any I have read in a long time. This is a masterful debut — beautifully written, brilliantly structured, often unnerving and harrowing but, ultimately, deeply moving. ~Chip Cheek, Author of Cape May
A wild ride across decades and emotional depths, The Patricide of George Benjamin Hill follows one man’s rise from humble beginnings to the pinnacle of power and greed, and the lengths his scattershot offspring will go to exact revenge on the father who left them behind in pursuit of the American Dream. ~Kelly J. Ford, Author of Cottonmouths