John Addison Dally grew up in a non-religious family in the suburbs of Chicago. When he became a Christian at 17 and then an Episcopal priest in his early twenties they shook their heads, but gave him a nice waffle iron as an ordination gift. His shockingly queer Ph.D. dissertation won the Marc Perry Galler prize at the University of Chicago, a turn of events he attributes to a bureaucratic mix-up, but he's not giving the money back. He has been married to his husband for 34 years, 13 of them legally.
“The Master Is Here is a literary tour de force: believable characters navigate the universal hazards of the human condition. With exquisite literary skill, Dally brings each story to an adept, honest, solidly satisfying conclusion. The paradoxes and complexities of these lives remain intact, unsullied by cliché or platitude. Life may have no easy answers, but it sure has some terrific questions. ” – Catherine M. Wallace PhD, cultural critic and author of Confronting Religious Denial of Gay Marriage: Christian Humanism and the Moral Imagination. “The characters in John Dally’s The Master is Here are briefly sketched, yet fully drawn. A few, I wanted to throttle; many, I wanted to embrace. All left me intrigued and wanting to know them better, and that is a mark of beautifully crafted short stories. These glimpses into lives intersecting with gayness and Christianity are for everyone who cares about people and their experiences both unique and universal. They’re for all of us who yearn for beauty, meaning, and connection in this life, and maybe even in a next one.” – Rhonda M. Lee, author of Love and Happiness: Eros According to Dante, Shakespeare, Jane Austen, and the Rev. Al Green “We encounter the ‘thin places’ that join the worlds of Christian faith and gay life in these stories, rediscovering the workings of fate, circumstance, and mystery in the concrete particularities of everyday life. Dally brings a sensuous intelligence and historical imagination to his accounts of unexpected meetings and shared moments. The master is here, whether called or not, and he offers an ‘accidental theology’ for spiritual seekers and nonbelievers alike.” — William Borden, University of Chicago “John Dally offers us a masterful and beautifully written collection of stories full of deep insight, passion, humor, heartbreak, faith, and love. Through the depth of his imagination and profound spiritual insights, what emerges is nothing less than the kaleidoscope of humanity in all its twists and turns, joys and sorrows, foibles and faithfulness.” — The Rev. Tim Schenck, Rector of St. John the Evangelist Episcopal Church in Hingham, Massachusetts and @FatherTim on Twitter