Read this exclusive guest post from Jill Orr about her fascination with obituaries, and then make sure to sign in and comment below for a chance to win a copy of the 1st Riley Ellison Mystery, The Good Byline!
“I wake up every morning at nine and grab for the morning paper. Then I look at the obituary page. If my name is not on it, I get up.” –Benjamin Franklin
Benjamin Franklin isn’t alone. Millions of people around the world choose to start their day by reading about death. Morbid? Maybe. But I’d argue that reading obituaries is one of the most life-affirming pursuits out there—not to mention a great way to gain a little perspective.
The main character in my novel, The Good Byline, is obsessed with obituaries. She reads the obits from eight different newspapers every day, culling through each one looking for those tiny illuminating details of a life well lived. For Riley, this is a way to live vicariously through other people since she isn’t exactly setting the world on fire herself. And, for me, since I wanted to write a murder mystery, the obituary section is a perfect place to find potential victims.
But the idea of writing a character who reads the obituaries as a hobby came from—where else—social media. I was scrolling through Facebook one day, putting off cleaning my house/being productive/talking to actual people, when I saw that someone posted an obituary with the comment: This is the best obituary ever written. Was I not going to click on that? Of course I was! (It was that or fold laundry. This was not a tough call.)
The obit in question had been linked to from a website called Legacy.com—a place where people write and submit obituaries for their loved ones—and it was hilarious, touching, and vivid. When I finished reading it, I felt like I’d known this man, this stranger, who lived in another part of the country and whom I’d never met.
After I read that obituary, I read another, and another, and eventually fell down a rabbit hole of amazing obits. But even more amazing than the obits themselves was the fact that I stumbled upon this entire community of people who read obituaries as a hobby. It’s absolutely fascinating. They even have their own conferences! I had to know more. And so began my own fascination, not so much with obituaries themselves, but with the people who write and read them.
Here are my top 5 reads about obituaries:
The Dead Beat: Lost Souls, Lucky Stiffs, and the Perverse Pleasures of Obituaries
by Marilyn Johnson.
I cannot say enough about how wonderful this quirky little book is. My copy is dog-eared and worn, and every time I pick it up I find a new gem I somehow missed the last time. Marilyn Johnson, a bonafide obituary writer herself, talks about her own attraction to the form as a reader, explores the cultural and regional differences of obituary styles, and profiles many of the great obit writers of our time.
Obit: Inspiring Stories of People Who Led Extraordinary Lives
by Jim Sheeler
Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Jim Sheeler profiles everyday people who lived everyday lives and illustrates through unique details, funny stories, and touching memories that we are all, in our own way, extraordinary. Jim Sheeler has been called “the godfather of obituary writing,” and it’s easy to see why after you read his work. Obit is filled with wisdom, humor, and, above all else, humanity. And on a hilarious note, when describing the audience for whom this book was written, Sheeler said, “Anyone who ever plans to die.”
Life on the Death Beat: A Handbook for Obituary Writers
by Alana Baranick, Jim Sheeler, and Stephen Miller
While this book is certainly what the subtitle suggests, a handbook for obit writers, it is also much more than that. It contains advice gleaned from three of the most accomplished obituary writers working today. I found it more than simply instructive. In detailing what goes into writing a well-formed obit, we learn about those things that remain in the final analysis—the questions, the details, the pitfalls that shape a life and provide the unique perspective that can only be found in hindsight.
Death Becomes Her: Selected Obituaries by Margalit Fox
by The New York Times
This e-single is a collection of obituaries written by the interminable Margalit Fox, who has written thousands of obituaries for the prestigious New York Times. It includes the final farewells of the Miss Manners of Mo-town, the inventor of Stove Top Stuffing, and NASA’s Mr. Fix-It. But the real treat here lies in Fox’s brilliant prose and the detective-like way that she investigates what it was about each person that made them emblematic of their time. The New York Times is arguably some of the most coveted obit real estate in existence, and Fox never fails to zero in on why her subject’s lives should matter to us all.
Harry Stamps Obituary
I would be remiss if I didn’t include the obituary that started it all for me: the funny, heartwarming, and memorable obituary of Mr. Harry Stamps, written by his daughter, Amanda Lewis. Originally published in Mississippi’s The Sun Herald via Legacy.com, this tribute contains details like, “He never lost a game of competitive sickness,” and “He particularly hated Day Light Savings Time, which he referred to as The Devil’s Time [sic].” It is easy to see why this obit went viral. It does what all the best obituaries do, which is bring a person back to life, if only for a few paragraphs.
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Jill Orr has written features and a parenting column for COMO Living Magazine (formerly Columbia Home) in her hometown of Columbia, Missouri, for more than ten years, and her humor essays are found on her blog, An Exercise in Narcissism. The Good Byline is her first book.
Here’s hoping you don’t read about me, anytime soon.
What a unique and wonderful feature and giveaway. Thanks.
This is fascinating and veyr special.
Only eight! She’s a piker. I even read obits from Mexico, Spain, Argentina, and Peru.
Great
I, too, read the obits in my local paper. Most are badly written.
I enjoyed your article and the book would be a treasure.
I am a long-time obituary reader, too. I love the idea of a series featuring an obituary writer!
I am a long-time obituary reader, too. I love the idea of a series featuring an obituary writer!
Always read the obits! Always. And now that I’m of, um, a certain age, the interest is even more personal. Obits and police reports — this is life!
I am definitely adding The Dead Beat: Lost Souls, Lucky Stiffs, and the Perverse Pleasures of Obituaries to my TBR list. And thank you for the giveaway!
People can have the most amazing hobbies. Now the internet lets you find people who share those hobbies. We live in interesting times.
Love old cement Aries, love to read the epithets. Now excited to read Obits.
I always felt sorry for the obituary writers of the newspapers who would be researching and writing of obituaries of people who were still alive so that the paper or wire service would be ready with an article by deadline. Now I understand and in fact would be very interested in seeing some of these rough drafts.
Novels about obituaries, obituary obituaries–I love them all!
Obits fascinate me!
At my age of 85, obituaries are very important..would love to read the book.
I can recall a number of humdingers over the years, not all of which were intending to be unserious. The important thing is that the recently departed were beloved. Clever epitaphs on headstones can also be fascinating!
Wish I had the talent to write a good obit.
sounds like a fun one
sounds like a good read
Sounds interesting!
Thought that I was the only one looking for good obits.
Thought that I was the only one looking for good obits.
It’s amazing what one can learn about people from their obituaries.
I love to read obituaries. But i don’t want to be featured in one. Not too soon, anyway.
A different way to get involved in a mystery.
Count me in, please!
Nice article, and the book sounds like a good one
I read the obits every day. I would like to read this book.
I read the obits every day. I would like to read this book.
And here I was thinking my father-in-law was the the world’s only obit addict…
I thought I was the only person in the world who reads the obits first!
Want to win! 🙂
I sed to write obits for the funeral home I worked at. It was always intresting to learn about peoples lives.
While working for a local newspaper 35 years ago, my list of duties grew to include writing obituaries. In some cases, it was very difficult, but always fascinating to learn about people. Best of luck with your book.
I want to win.
I hope I win this. The book sounds great.
interesting
Thanks for the giveaway!
I’ve been reading obituaries myself, lately, looking for examples of really great ones. I plan on writing my own obit soon. I want to make things easier for my kids, while avoiding the standard boilerplate language used too often. Would love the book!
My next door neighbor is the person I credit for getting me ‘hooked’ on reading obituaries. She had told me how much she enjoyed reading them the one day and I thought at first she was nuts. I could understand checking to see if old friends and relatives would crop up but why read strangers?! Well, I decided to check it out for myself and discovered that it is actually enjoyable as you learn the most interesting paths of people and see such outpourings of love from family.
I learned something new; people who read obituaries for a hobby, have conferences. So I’d like to read this mystery by Jill Orr.
I will live! Yes!
This book is going to be so much fun to read and review! The hardest part of the obituaries is when your loved ones are in them. Looking forward to this book…
I would like to know more about these obituary readers.
Hope I win!
This sounds like a great read! Although not obits, but epitaphs the 1915 Spoon River Anthology is a classic… ?
sounds life a great book