Every time I read a book about obituaries, it makes me think about mine. I actually read The Dead Beat: Lost Souls, Lucky Stiffs and the Perverse Pleasures of Obituaries by Marilyn Johnson when it first came out in 2006. Someone on my blog mentioned it recently. (It seems like a Tracy and Glen book.) I picked it up again, and I’m going to share the library book with my sister. She and I do take a perverse pleasure in reading a good obituary. I never know what path it will take me down.

This book really only makes sense if you enjoy reading obituaries of people you never know, as well as celebrities. The book discusses the various forms obituaries take, and the newspapers that spotlight great obituaries, and the people who write them. Johnson admires the British newspapers the most, and the sardonic wit they bring to obituaries. However, some newspapers focus on ordinary people and the extraordinary features of their lives, bringing those people to life for family and friends who knew the deceased.

I agree with Johnson’s comment. “Obituaries are history as it is happening.” Take this one about obituary writing with a grain of salt. “Certiainly it contains the most creative writing in journalism.” The writing in this book is crisp and amusing. Johnson discusses two obituary writers’ conferences she attended, one in New Mexico, one in Bath, England. At those conferences, she met some of her idols, the heroes of obit writing, the people who made obits come alive (pun intended).

She also discussed the changes in obits. One came about because of 9/11 when newspapers covered so many deaths with short posts about the lives that were lost. Other worldwide disasters triggered similar coverage.

It’s a strange book to reread. I know. But, I’ve read other books by people who write obituaries. I’ve read several by Heather Lende, who wrote about her life in small-town Alaska, and her coverage of the obit beat there. Once our new library opens on Saturday, I hope to find some more current books about obituaries.

Marilyn Johnson’s website is https://www.marilynjohnson.net/

The Dead Beat: Lost Souls, Lucy Stiffs and the Perverse Pleasures of Obituaries by Marilyn Johnson. HarperCollins, 2006. 223p.


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