This obituary-related forum serves as the blog for The Society of Professional Obituary Writers. Please join in the discussion with and ask questions of folks who write about the dead for a living, and others, who study, enjoy, read and/or write obituaries.
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Rambling man: Nature lover’s life full of peaks, valleys
Another outstanding local news story. Who said good writing in small-town dailies is dead?
Labels:
Centre Daily Times,
feature,
obituary,
obituary writers
Friday, February 25, 2011
Mash those details
In case you haven't seen this on Facebook:
Obituary editor: “Can you imagine liking mashed potatoes so much that it’s included in your obituary?”
To us, that's a detail worth exploring.Wednesday, February 09, 2011
Barbara "Bookie" Grasgreen, daughter of a "ne'er-do-well absentee father"
Barbara Grasgreen's family may have gotten carried away while writing Grasgreen's obituary that ran in the paid death notice section of the Cleveland Plain Dealer on Feb. 9, 2011. Or perhaps the deceased wrote her own obit in advance.
Whatever the case, the obit starts with an attention grabbing sentence:
BARBARA GRASGREEN "BOOKIE" (Weiner) was born in 1923 in Pittsburgh to immigrant parents; Morris, a cooper and ne'er-do-well absentee father and Ida Gorodinsky, a seamstress and dedicated, determined, nurturing mother.
Click here to read the whole obit before it disappears from the Internet.
Whatever the case, the obit starts with an attention grabbing sentence:
BARBARA GRASGREEN "BOOKIE" (Weiner) was born in 1923 in Pittsburgh to immigrant parents; Morris, a cooper and ne'er-do-well absentee father and Ida Gorodinsky, a seamstress and dedicated, determined, nurturing mother.
Click here to read the whole obit before it disappears from the Internet.
Monday, February 07, 2011
Green Burial in Georgia
Green burial is gaining popularity. Our colleague Kate Sweeney, pictured here, has produced a piece on Georgia's only conservation burial ground for the Atlanta PBS station, WABE. Here's the link to Kate's story:
http://www.pba.org/programming/programs/citycafe/
Founded by monks of the Monastery of the Holy Spirit 80 years ago, the burial ground is filled not with tombstone after tombstone but with birds and trees and indigenous wildlife and flora.
Kate's segment records her trip to the burial ground with Pat Fahey who visits his wife, Jackie, buried there in a grave he and his sons dug.
Go with Kate to this conservation burial ground, one of only five in the nation.
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