Ben Masters teaches English at the University of Nottingham. His literary journalism has appeared in the New York Times, the Times Literary Supplement and Literary Review.
With his dying father unable to leave the house and follow the butterfly cycle for the first time since he was a child, Ben Masters endeavors to become his connection to the outdoors and his treasured butterflies, reporting back with stories of beloved species and with stories of the woods and meadows that are their habitats and once were his. Structured around a series of exchanges and remembrances, butterflies become a way of talking about masculinity, memory, generational differences, and ultimately loss and continuation. Masters takes readers on an unlikely journey where Luther Vandross and The Sopranos rub shoulders with the likes of Angela Carter and Virginia Woolf on butterflies and gender; the metamorphoses of Prince; Zadie Smith on Joni Mitchell and how sensibilities evolve; and the lives and works of Vladimir Nabokov and other literary lepidopterists.