Boston, MA — 2026-06-11

Geoffrey B. Voigt Releases 'A Table Set For Time,' a Short Fiction About Grief and Family

The 34-page story follows a grieving son who wakes in his 1963 childhood home for one final evening with his parents.

A Table Set For Time book cover

Geoffrey B. Voigt has published A Table Set For Time: A Story of Grief, Grace, and Homecoming, a short work of fiction now available in ebook format at https://www.amazon.com/Table-Set-Time-Story-Homecoming-ebook/dp/B0GNM14321. The 34-page story centers on sixty-six-year-old Jeff Voigt, who, after burying both parents at Arlington National Cemetery, falls asleep and awakens on the porch of his childhood home in Wilburton, Oklahoma — in the summer of 1963. He is still an adult, carrying a full life of memory and regret, but supper is being prepared inside and his family is alive. The premise is a single question: what would you say if you were given one more evening with your parents?

The book arrives at a moment when short-form literary fiction is finding renewed readership among adults navigating loss and family transitions. Grief memoirs and quiet domestic fiction have seen sustained commercial interest in recent years, driven partly by aging Baby Boomer readers and partly by book club culture that favors emotionally resonant, discussable titles. A Table Set For Time is catalogued under Fiction / Family Life / General (FIC045000), a category that encompasses character-driven stories rooted in everyday domestic experience. At 34 pages, it is designed to be read in a single sitting — a format that lowers the barrier to entry for readers who want literary depth without a multi-week commitment. The publisher's own description positions it explicitly as book-club compatible, making it a practical choice for groups that rotate shorter selections between longer novels.

The narrative places Jeff inside the rhythms of a household that no longer exists: his Air Force father, described as principled and measured; his mother, quietly perceptive; his younger sister; and the small boy he once was — trusting, unaware of the decades ahead. Voigt structures the tension around a moral question that tightens as the evening progresses. Jeff knows what is coming — the losses, the mistakes, the years that will pass. Should he warn them? Protect them? Or does love require letting the past remain exactly as it was? The story does not resolve that question with a tidy answer. Instead, it uses the single evening as a lens through which ordinary domestic moments — a radio humming, a meal being prepared, a porch in warm air — accumulate into something that feels irreplaceable precisely because it is temporary.

The named setting, Wilburton, Oklahoma, and the specific year, 1963, are not incidental details. They anchor the story in a particular American postwar domestic culture — Air Force family life, mid-century small-town rhythms — that gives the fantasy its texture and credibility. The central device, an adult consciousness dropped into a childhood scene, is a literary structure with precedent in American short fiction, but Voigt's use of it is grounded in autobiography. The protagonist shares the author's name and family history, including a father who served in the Air Force and parents buried at Arlington. That autobiographical proximity gives the fiction an intimacy that distinguishes it from more distanced literary exercises in nostalgia or time-travel allegory.

"A Table Set For Time is a moving short work of fiction about grief, gratitude, and the enduring bond between parents and children," said Geoffrey B. Voigt, Author.

The book's primary audience is adults who have experienced parental loss or who are navigating the anticipatory grief that comes with aging parents. That demographic is broad: the U.S. Census Bureau estimates that more than 76 million Baby Boomers are currently between their early sixties and early eighties, a cohort for whom the loss of a parent is either recent or imminent. For that readership, A Table Set For Time offers something specific — not a grief manual or a memoir, but a fictional space in which the longing for one more conversation is taken seriously and explored without sentimentality. Book clubs focused on themes of family, memory, and aging will find the story's central question — what would you say? — a natural starting point for discussion. The story is also accessible to younger adult readers processing early parental loss, as the emotional core does not depend on the reader being sixty-six years old to recognize the feeling of a table that is no longer set.

A Table Set For Time is available now as an ebook through https://www.amazon.com/Table-Set-Time-Story-Homecoming-ebook/dp/B0GNM14321. Pricing is set at standard ebook retail rates on the platform. At 34 pages, the title is compatible with Kindle Unlimited where applicable, and can be read on any device running the Kindle app, including smartphones, tablets, and desktop computers. No additional hardware is required. Readers interested in purchasing a copy for book club use can acquire multiple ebook licenses through standard Amazon gifting and purchasing options.

A Table Set For Time is Geoffrey B. Voigt's first work of fiction and represents a deliberate expansion of his writing beyond nonfiction and practical guides. His previously announced title, The Business of Drones, is a practical guide to building a commercial aerial photography business — a subject grounded in his own career as an FAA-certified drone pilot and professional aerial photographer. His next announced project, Charlie's War, moves into narrative nonfiction: a true account of his uncle's escape after crash-landing in Nazi-occupied France during World War II. Taken together, the three titles suggest a writing program that moves between practical nonfiction, personal history, and literary fiction — with family, service, and American mid-century life as recurring subjects.

Geoffrey B. Voigt is a U.S. Naval Academy graduate, retired financial planner, FAA-certified drone pilot, and professional aerial photographer based in the United States. His fiction debut, A Table Set For Time: A Story of Grief, Grace, and Homecoming, is available at https://www.amazon.com/Table-Set-Time-Story-Homecoming-ebook/dp/B0GNM14321. His nonfiction title The Business of Drones addresses the commercial drone photography industry. He is currently developing Charlie's War, a narrative account of his uncle's World War II escape from Nazi-occupied France. Voigt began flight training at a young age and has built a professional practice around aerial photography.


Press contact: Geoffrey Voigt · jeff@jbvoigt.com
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