@ Join us as we celebrate local Omaha Author Danilo John Thomas, and his short story collection, Ore Vein. The author will be accompanied by banjo player, Robert Schmidt. When: Tuesday, May 12 Doors open at 6pm Where: Joslyn Castle Carriage House 3902 Davenport St. Omaha, NE 681310 Free All Ages event Ore Vein, the debut short story collection by Danilo John Thomas, explores the thin spaces between hardship and heroism prevalent in small-town America. Thomas captures what it feels like to come of age among the urban decay and cracked pastoral landscapes of Southwestern Montana and a fictionalized version of the town where he was raised. From the claustrophobia of crumbling mine shafts to the senseless consequences of bar brawls, these stories are at once mystical and all too real, violent yet deeply introspective, masculine but tender. In “Gift Horse” Tarin and her father, an aging football star, are visited by the children of a childhood friend, and they want to go fishing in the mountains . . . in the middle of the night; in “Beating the Dead” Pinpurse kills snakes with his sister hoping to dredge up some sympathy. Instead, he faces some hard truths; and in “Birdbone,” a horrific mine accident buries Tom Birdbone. Unable to go back underground after being rescued, he finds a job in an import warehouse where the demands of furnishing the rich may come at too high a cost. Ore Vein, like the mines it showcases, digs deep in dark places after fortunes, showing what it means to hit the mother lode and, sometimes, what it means to lose it. Danilo John Thomas is the author of the short story collection, Ore Vein (Veliz Books, 2026) and two chapbooks, The Hand Implements (The Cupboard Pamphlet, 2017), and Murk (AB Gorham, 2012). A graduate of the PhD program in creative writing at Florida State University, he is recently the co-publisher at Octopus Books, managing and prose editor at Baobab Press, and assistant managing editor at The Kenyon Review. Born and raised in Southwestern Montana, he now lives in Omaha, Nebraska, with his wife, two daughters, and one toothsome staffy. Robert Schmidt has used banjo playing and songwriting to bring beauty, levity, and sense to his life for the past 12 years. Through music, Robert connects with the cultural ecology of our world, which is one of his favorite things about being human. New to Omaha, you can find more of his work on Instagram as part of the band Raddletrap. This machine creates community. Add to calendar Google Calendar iCalendar Outlook 365 Outlook Live