An Interview with Novelist Christopher Blunt, author of "Passport"
by Ellen Gable Hrkach
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Tell us a bit about yourself and your family.
My wife and I live on a fifteen acre farm in rural mid-Michigan with our
kids. Our children are aged 13, 10, 7 and a newborn. My wife is a
"recovering attorney," and has been home full-time with the children
since our first one arrived. We have homeschooled them all since
Kindergarten, and have found a wonderful community of other
homeschooling families here. I am self-employed with my own public
opinion research consulting practice; I analyze survey data and conduct
focus groups, especially related to politics and public policy. I am a
Seattle native and cradle Catholic, but didn't really learn the faith
until I got to college in Chicago and met some friends who were much
more committed to it. |
What prompted you to write a novel?
A few years ago, I found my mind drifting back to when I was single, and
had faced a difficult choice about dating a particular young woman. I'd
liked her, but her background presented some real obstacles to ever
having the traditional Catholic family I'd always wanted. Things had
come to an emotional head one evening, and I'd come close to making a
terrible decision. After some struggle, I chose to walk away from her --
but only in looking back could I appreciate all the fruit that had
flowed from that one choice, and the "parade of horribles" that could
have proceeded had I made one decision differently. As I reflected on
the details of what could have happened, and the seemingly-impossible
hole that I would have found myself in, I realized that this could be a
very compelling situation for a novel.
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Give us a short synopsis of your novel.
Passport is a coming-of-age novel, and a love story, but not a romance.
My central character, Stan Eigenbauer, is living a generally upright --
but soft and self-satisfied -- bachelor life in Chicago. He meets an
attractive young Vietnamese-American woman (Trinh Le) who he likes and
is interested in dating, but soon discovers that there's a problem: she
can't, and won't, get married in the Catholic Church. Stan's head tells
him to walk away immediately, but the two of them get carried away by
their emotions; he stays too late at her apartment, and the two of them
go too far. Stan does try to move on, but the emotional baggage and
other consequences of his bad decision threaten to turn several peoples'
lives upside down. He's now faced with a decision that is much bigger
and much more difficult, and every option seems bad in a different way. |
After agonizing over these options, Stan makes an unconventional choice
that appears both heroic and suicidal. As the story progresses, and Stan
struggles (not always successfully) to live with the consequences of
his unconventional choice, he grows more faithful to his commitments and
more committed to his faith. And he discovers a depth of joy and
happiness far beyond what he or we could have expected.
Why the title?
We usually think of a passport as something needed to cross an
international border. In his homily at our wedding, the priest
analogized marriage as being a "passport" to heaven. My passport is
named Micki. My wife's passport is named Chris. His point was that
marriage is a school of self-giving, and of learning to sacrifice
oneself for the members of one's family. That process transforms a
person into one who is capable of crossing the border into heaven at the
end of his or her life. It took me many years to appreciate the truth
of this analogy, and it is the biggest thing that Stan must learn as he
grapples to reset the course of his life.
Who is the target audience and what is the message you hope readers will take from your book?
Passport’s target audience is Catholics in their twenties and thirties,
but I have heard from people of all ages and religious stripes who have
enjoyed the story. Women tend to find the romantic elements and family
relationships particularly compelling, but this is decidedly not a
“romance novel” in the traditional sense. Men especially appreciate
seeing the story told from the perspective of one of their own, and say
they often find themselves empathizing with Stan’s experiences and
taking inspiration from them. Although the novel’s important conflicts
stem from distinctly “Catholic” sources, these teachings are
incorporated organically into the plot; non-Catholics find themselves
enjoying the story on its own terms, without feeling preached to.
The key message I hope readers take from the book is that marriage and
family life are difficult, but it is precisely in and through those
sacrifices that we grow and learn to love others the way God wants us
to. And the happiness that stems from that kind of love is far deeper
and much more satisfying than what we find in pursuing our own desires.
Tell us about the main character, Stan, and in what ways is he similar to you and in what ways is he different?
Stan begins the story in his late 20s. His parents are recently
deceased, and left him the six-flat building that he grew up in on the
north side of Chicago. He lives in one unit; the rental income from the
other five units has allowed him to quit his job as an engineer and
pursue his hobby of restoring vintage cars. He's an introvert, and
enjoys his time alone working on cars and watching baseball, but is
lonely and wonders when he'll find the good Catholic woman he can live
happily ever after with. Stan is a faithful Catholic who attends Mass
weekly, and he knows the teachings of the Church backwards and forwards,
but he has no interior life of prayer. He prides himself on being a
full fledged, following-all-the-rules member of the Catholic "club." He
dreams of having a large number of children -- not because he enjoys or
even likes kids, but because he believes it would mark him as having the
ultimate Catholic marriage. The externals of Stan's situation differ
greatly from mine when I was single, and my life of prayer was much
better developed, but Stan's temperament is a lot like mine -- and I
shared many of his underlying attitudes, particularly about marriage and
children.
The character whom I most closely resemble is Stan's best friend, Jim
Walsh, who lives on a farm outside Chicago with his wife and their
homeschooled children. Jim plays a key supporting role as Stan's
confidante, and in helping guide Stan in the decisions he must make.
Your book touches on many Catholic themes. Which theme or themes would you say would be the most prominent?
Catholic teachings about the indissolubility of marriage are critical to
the novel's central conflict, and exert the biggest influences on the
characters' choices.
Your book is both uplifting and realistic and I was touched by
Stan’s efforts to selflessly repair his mistake. How do you answer the
criticism that your book shows more of the sacrifice and suffering of
marriage than the joys?
As you note, the story is chiefly about Stan's effort to address the
effects of a bad decision. But by the nature of what Stan has done, and
the situation he now finds himself in, his subsequent family
relationships are inherently compromised. That limits the degree of
"normal" marital joy that Stan is able to experience. However, one point
the story tries to make is that every successful marriage has its
sacrifices and privations; some are more extreme than others, but the
generosity with which a person shoulders those sacrifices is directly
correlated with the ultimate joy and interior happiness the person
experiences --- even if that joy and happiness are not of the usual
variety.
Is there anything you'd like to add?
Finally, I would add that I am in the process of writing a sequel. It
picks up approximately four years after the conclusion of Passport, and
Stan's situation will include many of the more "usual" joys of family
life which eluded him in the original story. Certain important things
will remain out of his grasp initially, however, and he will need to
make some tough decisions about what he is willing to change and
sacrifice in order to reach all that God might have in mind for his
family.
Click here to order your copy of "Passport"
Click here to visit the publisher's "Passport" webpage