Speaking from his home in Queens, N.Y., novelist Phil Klay 鈥05鈥攁 former Marine and Iraq war veteran who will be in residence (virtually) as a in August鈥攁pologizes for the jackhammer racket outside his house. Workers are repairing damage from a fire the day before.
鈥淢y street caught fire yesterday鈥攖here were flames coming out of the manholes,鈥 Klay says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 2020, always full of surprises.鈥
As a Montgomery Fellow, Klay will engage in online public conversations with President Emeritus , 天美影视 of Classics , former Dartmouth trustee and fellow veteran and author Nate Fick 鈥99, and Dartmouth veterans during the first two weeks of August. (See below for dates and times of Klay鈥檚 Montgomery events.)
Despite the global pandemic and the civil unrest around the country, Klay (rhymes with 鈥渆ye鈥)鈥攚hose debut short story collection, Redeployment, won the 2014 National Book Award, among other recognitions鈥攈as reason to be grateful this year: In April, his wife, Jessica Alvarez 鈥06, gave birth to their new son. And in October, Klay鈥檚 first novel, Missionaries, will be published by Penguin Random House.
The book was six years in the making. Set in Colombia, Iraq, Afghanistan, Yemen, and America, it follows four main characters whose stories intersect across global conflicts.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a novel about how we project violence around the world,鈥 Klay says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about the globalization of that violence and the after-effects鈥攚hat happens after we do violence in the middle of a complex conflict.鈥
Writing as a 鈥楾ruth-Seeking Enterprise鈥
Klay, who now teaches creative writing at Fairfield University, majored in English at Dartmouth, where he had the opportunity to meet poet, short story writer, and activist Grace Paley when she herself was a Montgomery Fellow in winter 2005.
鈥淪he told us something I never forgot about writing. She said, 鈥榃hen I revise, I don鈥檛 revise to make a story better鈥擨 revise to make it more true,鈥欌 says Klay.
The lesson? 鈥淔iction writing is a truth-seeking enterprise.鈥
That was the ethos he brought to writing Missionaries. After all of his research鈥攔eading widely and traveling to Colombia to conduct interviews鈥攈e says, 鈥淭here鈥檚 just writing and rewriting and writing and rewriting, over and over and over again until you get at least closer to the truth.鈥
After Dartmouth, Klay joined the Marines, and was deployed as a public affairs officer in Iraq鈥檚 Anbar province, an experience that informs the stories that make up Redeployment. After his service, he earned an MFA in creative writing from Hunter College.
In recent years Klay has published several wide-ranging essays in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, The New Yorker, and elsewhere on issues related to America鈥檚 wars. He calls writing nonfiction 鈥渏ust a different way of exploring a lot of the same questions. Fiction follows a narrative; nonfiction follows an argument.鈥
But writing fiction allows him 鈥渢o get at the human heart behind the day鈥檚 news,鈥 he says.
鈥淚鈥檝e always thought that fiction is the most rigorous way of looking at a topic. War has become so complicated that it鈥檚 really hard to get a hold of. Fiction offers us tools to do that that not a lot of other things do.鈥
A Virtual Montgomery Residency
President Wright, a historian and former Marine who has long advocated for veterans nationally and at Dartmouth, calls Klay 鈥渙ne of the best young writers of our time.鈥
鈥淧hil writes thoughtfully and provocatively in nonfiction as well as fiction,鈥 Wright says. 鈥淗is work forces us to think about America鈥檚 role in the world and those whom we ask to serve on our behalf. 鈥
Stewart, a scholar of ancient Roman history, is also deeply engaged in veterans鈥 issues, and has spearheaded the creation of book groups for returned combat veterans to engage with the literature of war, including texts like Homer鈥檚 Iliad.
鈥淚 am particularly looking forward to the opportunities for Dartmouth undergraduates to engage with Phil Klay鈥檚 work, to think carefully with him about America鈥檚 imaginings of what veterans are or are supposed to be like, and the personal and social costs of the so-called military-civilian divide,鈥 Stewart says.
Klay will be participating in the following free, online events during his residency. For access links and up-to-date scheduling and other information, visit the or contact Ellen Henderson at ellen.henderson@dartmouth.edu.
- 6 p.m., Tuesday, Aug. 4: American Culture and Military Culture: A Conversation with Phil Klay and Jim Wright
- Thursday, Aug. 6: Marine Memoirs and Civilian Life: A Conversation with Phil Klay and Nate Fick (prerecorded video available on the Montgomery website)
- Tuesday, Aug. 11: Accounts of War, Ancient and Modern: A Conversation with Phil Klay and Roberta Stewart (prerecorded video available on the Montgomery website)
- 6 p.m., Thursday, Aug. 13: A Roundtable Conversation with Phil Klay and Young Dartmouth Veterans
About the Montgomery Fellows Program
Established in 1977, the Montgomery Fellows Program brings distinguished visitors鈥攕cholars, artists, authors, historians, politicians, and more鈥攖o campus for residencies ranging from several days to an entire term. More than 230 fellows, including Yo-Yo Ma, Cornel West, Desmond Tutu, Louise Erdrich 鈥76, Joan Didion, and Gerald Ford, have taught, spent time creating new works and scholarship, delivered public lectures, and connected with students and the greater Dartmouth community.
Hannah Silverstein can be reached at hannah.silverstein@dartmouth.edu.