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, September 20, 2015
RIP Leonard Neft
In 1983, Neft told the Mercury News' Sunday magazine that despite tradition, obits shouldn't be reserved for famous people.
"I feel I can do an obit on a housewife who's never done anything," Neft said in the article. "It's a challenge to find out what people did that was interesting in their lives."
FMI: Click here.
Saturday, September 12, 2015
Escaping to the death beat
Monday, August 10, 2015
Heather Lende Finds the Good
Click here for the interview.
Sunday, July 26, 2015
What life is like for the person who writes death notices
But did you know that the person in the classified department who's paid to type those profitable ads also faces backlash about the publication's cash flow problems? As Adam Matcho noted in this essay for XOJane:
[My boss] asked if deaths were down this year in Westmoreland County, because revenue is down, and is that maybe something I would want to look into? He wanted me to email him back.
My boss and I, we’ve gone rounds on this before. He understands I am more concerned about not transposing two letters in one of those crazy last names from Polish Hill than how much money the paper makes. He understands people have to die for this department to make money. He understands I do not consider myself a salesperson. I consider myself an aide capable of typing 70 words per minute, a guide for people who are raw; people who react emotionally and hold fiercely to what they have left of the dead.
Click here to read the rest of Matcho's story.
Sunday, July 19, 2015
The power of the last word
What is your code?
Monday, July 06, 2015
Tweet, tweet, we now tweet
If you are on Twitter, please follow @obituarywriters.
Wednesday, July 01, 2015
SPOW Elects New President
SPOW is a professional organization for folks who write about the dead for a living. Since 2007, the society has provided professional training and resources to help writers develop reporting, interviewing, writing and new media skills for creating outstanding obituaries.
O'Donnell became the newspaper's obituary writer in 2009 after 20 years as a general assignment reporter, during which she wrote about crumbling conditions in Chicago schools, Mississippi River flooding, the 1996 Democratic National Convention in Chicago and the Jeffrey Dahmer slayings. Before joining the Sun-Times, she was a reporter and editor at the City News Bureau of Chicago; a criminal courts reporter for the Milwaukee Journal, and an associate editor at Adweek magazine.
A Chicago native and graduate of Loyola University's Mundelein College, her journalism awards include the Chicago Headline Club's Anne Keegan Award, SPOW awards for obituary-writing, the Illinois Associated Press Editors Association public service reporting award, the Illinois Gold Bell Award from the Mental Health Association in Illinois and a Lisagor award. She believes obituaries have some of the best writing in newspapers and online, and that they’re both send-offs and storytelling from eyewitnesses to history.
Saturday, May 30, 2015
Focusing On The Sunny Side Of Obituary Writing
In her latest tome, "Find the Good," Lende shares some of the life lessons she's learned in the process of her work.
"Writing obituaries is my way of transcending bad news," she wrote. "It has taught me the value of intentionally trying to find the good in people and situations, and that practice -- and I do believe that finding the good can be practiced -- has made my life more meaningful."
Lende recently appeared on "A Beautiful World," a news program in Saint Paul, Minn., that focuses on inspirational stories from around the globe. You can listen to the extended interview here:
Want to win a copy of Lende's book? SPOW is giving away three free copies. To enter the drawing, simply send us an email and include your email and mailing addresses in the body as well as your reading format preference (ebook or hardcover). Deadline is June 30, 2015. Winners will be randomly chosen from all complete entries, and announced on The Obituary Forum.
Friday, May 29, 2015
From Obits To Arts, With Love
As for his work with the newspaper, Meacham plans to transition to a different position, that of performing arts critic.
In his latest column, Meacham explained how much he enjoyed working on the death beat.
"Writing these obituaries — more than 1,000 in all — has been the best experience of my career," he wrote. "People have invited me into their homes, where they shared scrapbooks and old letters and memories of recently departed loved ones. It is impossible to overstate the graciousness I have experienced from these families at the worst times of their lives, or my gratitude at being able to tell those stories."
We all wish him great success in his new job.
Sunday, May 10, 2015
Congrats To Maureen O'Donnell
The honor, given by the Chicago Headline Club and named for the late Chicago Tribune columnist, was established in 2012 to recognize journalists “who tell stories of ordinary people in extraordinarily well-reported and well-written prose.”
Click here for more.
Sunday, April 12, 2015
RIP Alana Baranick
Alana Baranick, founder of the Society of Professional Obituary Writers and a long-time contributor to this forum, died on April 10 of cancer. She was 65.
Alana was an award-winning journalist who penned nearly 2,000 obituaries. She was also the co-author of "Life on the Death Beat," a champion of obituary writers and a dear friend.
Click here to read the wonderful obituary penned by Leila Atassi for The Plain Dealer.
Farewell, Alana. And rest in peace.
Monday, March 23, 2015
Thinking about obits, graphically
Lee Kuan Yew's Singapore: An astonishing record http://t.co/G02XATYydF pic.twitter.com/H4gK3fyjrR
— The Economist (@TheEconomist) March 23, 2015
I admit, I haven't given much thought to showing the deceased's life in graphics. What are some interesting charts, maps and infographics you've used to accompany your stories?
Saturday, February 21, 2015
Unique Cause Of Death Listed In Family-Written Obit
“It was worth it for the family. It was the only time the family was able to laugh in days,” Merrill’s close friend, Andrew Albreacht, told the local ABC affiliate WFTS. “We were all laughing, and it made the situation easier to deal with.”
Click here for more.
Saturday, January 10, 2015
Obituary Writing: A Complex System Of Building Up Trust
Saturday, October 04, 2014
JOB: Creative Obituary Writer
FMI: Click here.
Monday, September 15, 2014
Quote of the day
Wednesday, August 06, 2014
Making a List….
Here are the eight we already feature on our website:
"The Dead Beat: Lost Souls, Lucky Stiffs, and the Perverse Pleasures of Obituaries" by Marilyn Johnson
"Life After Death" by Nigel Starck
"Life on the Death Beat: A Handbook for Obituary Writers" by Alana Baranick, Stephen Miller and Jim Sheeler
"Deadlines: Obits of Memorable British Columbians" by Tom Hawthorn
"Obit: Inspiring Stories of Ordinary People Who Lived Extraordinary Lives" by Jim Sheeler
"If You Lived Here, I'd Know Your Name" by Heather Lende
"Final Salute" by Jim Sheeler
"Working the Dead Beat" by Sandra Martin
What other books should we include?
Sunday, July 06, 2014
Oh you want this shirt? Here you go
For example, when Oprah Winfrey eventually dies, her obit writers will be able to use a version of the line with confidence. Earlier this year, the talk show legend gave away a designer dress simply because a stranger asked her for it.
Sunday, June 15, 2014
Cleveland Press Club honors obit writer
Zaborney was honored for his obituary about Seymour Rothman, a veteran Blade columnist who "thrived among celebrities and everyday citizens."
Click here to read the obit.
Friday, June 13, 2014
Another one didn't "die"
So, now you can add "danced into spirit" to your collection of euphemisms for "died/"
Saturday, May 31, 2014
The bigger picture
When this happens, it's a good idea to take a step back and start looking at the entire cemetery rather than the individual tombstone.
In the comments, please share your tips for bringing a fresh point of view to an obit. Do you read the competition? Study historical examples? Turn to technological upgrades for new ideas? How do you come up with new and interesting ways to tell the deceased's story?
Saturday, April 12, 2014
On the death beat with Margalit Fox
"Almost every day, I am given a mystery to solve – the mystery of how a life was lived, and why that life, although it has run its course, matters vitally to us all.
For the past decade I have worked as an obituary news writer at The Times, most recently as a senior writer. The job – all-consuming, life-giving and never dull – is perhaps the strangest in American journalism but also one of the very best."
Click here for more.
Sunday, March 23, 2014
Obit Writer Muses About Life, Love And Death
New York Times obituary writer Bruce Weber has published "Life Is a Wheel: Love Death, Etc., and a Bike Ride Across America," a new travelogue The Associated Press described as both "delightful" and "fascinating."
The book focuses on Weber and his decision at 57 to reprise the coast-to-coast bike ride he took 18 years earlier. The 4,122-mile adventure takes him more than 100 days to complete, with just a few days off for a wedding in New Orleans and a funeral in Los Angeles.
[Weber's] book is more than a chronicle of his two-wheel journey across endless prairie and farm fields and through countless small towns and suburbs. One of the most fascinating sections recalls the author's 1995 bike trip in Vietnam, a more gripping adventure than anything he encounters on his latest ride. He is arrested while riding alone in the jungle, then stranded without food or water, an episode he can now fondly look back on as "one of the great moments of my life."
For more information, click here.
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Wednesday, January 01, 2014
Obituary Legend Pens Manual On Military Intelligence And Life
In a recent blog post, SPOW President Andy Meacham noted: "Like his career, there is nothing expected or usual in 'Because No One Else Can -- Inside the Military Intelligence Secret Sausage Factory.' This nearly 800-page tome, available on Amazon, is as he says, a textbook for intelligence analysts. It is also a history book, a primer on strategic thinking and an an amazingly full inside view of the kinds of challenges intelligence agents face in a post 9-11 world."
Click here to learn more.
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
WaPo Publishes Obituary Collection
On Dec. 10th, The Washington Post, in partnership with Diversion Books, published "21 Lives In 2013: Obituaries from The Washington Post." This 121-page ebook, written by the newspaper's top-notch obituary writers, commemorates the lives of Nelson Mandela, Chinua Achebe, Esther Williams, Virginia Johnson, Gussie Moran, Josh Burdette and many more. Marilyn Johnson, author of "The Dead Beat: Lost Souls, Lucky Stiffs and The Perverse Pleasures of Obituaries," also penned the introduction.
Best of all? The book only costs $2.99. Click here to learn more.
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Copy Editor Copy Edits His Own Obit
I wish I had met Trojanowski when he was alive. Not only was he a former journalist for the Associated Press, he was a fellow overnighter.
Saturday, September 14, 2013
What Do We Owe The Dead?
Wednesday, September 04, 2013
Sarah Silverman writes an obit
September 4, 2013
I wrote an obituary type thing:
Duck "Doug" Silverman came into my life about 14 years ago. He was picked up by the State running through South Central with no collar, tags or chip. Nobody claimed or adopted him so a no-kill shelter took him in. That’s where I found him -- at that shelter, in Van Nuys. Since then we have slept most every night together (and many lazy afternoons.) When we first met, the vet approximated his age at 5 ½ so I’d say he was about 19 as of yesterday, September 3, 2013.
He was a happy dog, though serene. And stoic. And he loved love.
Over the past few years he became blind, deaf, and arthritic. But with a great vet, good meds, and a first rate seeing-eye person named me, he truly seemed comfortable.
Recently, however, he stopped eating or drinking. He was skin and bones and so weak. I couldn’t figure out this hunger strike. Duck had never been political before. And then, over the weekend, I knew. It was time to let him go.
My boyfriend Kyle flew in late last night and took the day off from work to be with us. We laid in bed and massaged his tiny body, as we love to do – hearing his little “I’m in heaven” breaths.
The doctor came and Kyle, my sister, Laura and I laid on the bed. I held him close – in our usual spoon position and stroked him. I told him how loved he was, and thanked him for giving me such happiness and for his unwavering companionship and love. The doctor gave him a shot and he fell asleep, and then another that was basically an overdose of sleeping meds. I held him and kissed him and whispered to him well passed his passing. I picked him up and his body was limp – you don’t think about the head – it just falls. I held him so tight. And then finally, when his body lost its heat, and I could sense the doctor thinking about the imminent rush hour traffic, I handed him over.
14 years.
My longest relationship.
My only experience of maternal love.
My constant companion.
My best friend.
Duck.
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Jerry Vondas Dies At 83
“Jerry chronicled the lives of so many people in the city, from all walks of life,” said Tribune-Review Editor Frank Craig. “His words provided comfort to many families in a time of grief and made him a well-known, well-loved figure in our community. He took great pride in his work, and he leaves a wonderful journalistic legacy.”
For more, click here.
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Sunday, August 04, 2013
"Little Black Trains" Giveaway
To enter, send an email with the subject line, Little Black Trains. Include your email address and favorite quote about death or obituaries in the body of the email. You do not have to be a member of SPOW to participate.
Deadline is Aug. 10.
Winners will be selected at random from all properly-formatted entries.
JUST PUBLISHED: "Little Black Trains"
Here's the summary for "Little Black Trains: A Tale of Life, Death and Commuting" (Shaftoe Publishing, June 2013):
A prominent BBC reporter is murdered in mysterious circumstances. Her colleague, Ben Murray, has to produce her obituary for that day’s TV news bulletins. Ben commutes each day by train with another obituary writer, Steve Graham from The National Herald newspaper. Listening to Ben’s stories convinces Steve to move from sport to obituaries at his paper. Despite their shared profession, they differ in the subjects they choose. While Ben deals with the famous, Steve prefers the Morris dancer who performed before The Queen with a ferret down his trousers or the singing bus conductor. Sometimes Steve includes more details in his obits than is good for him. One thing they agree on, though, is that obituaries are about life, not death.Among the odd characters they and their clique encounter on their daily commute is an old woman they call The Crone. One day, Steve spies her in the street and decides to follow her out of curiosity. As a result, he becomes accidentally embroiled in a web of murder and intrigue that sucks his friends in too and provides him with plenty of material for his weekly obituary column.
During his two decades at the BBC, Chaundy produced hundreds of obituaries for television and the Web, so he has the inside track on what it really means to be an obit writer. "Little Black Trains" is his debut novel, and one he describes as "by far and away his best."
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Indian obits
Check out the first graf here for vocabulary: "is no more" stedda "died." Also "doyen," "breathed his last" and "last remains." Later: "broked," "condoled,"
The attention to the manner of death reminds me of 19th century obits, which frequently included dramatic accounts of the deceased's last moments. You almost never see that nowadays.
The Assam Tribune Pvt Ltd
Friday, July 26, 2013
Death and the obit writer's life
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
Can Eliot Spitzer improve his obit with a stellar comeback?
When his prostitution scandal first broke in 2008, there was a mention from a friend in the Times about how the scandal did not have to lead his obituary:
“I told him that I think, in the end, this incident will be a footnote to a great life lived greatly, and that he still has the ability to make enormous contributions,” said Alan M. Dershowitz, the Harvard law professor, who once counted Mr. Spitzer as a student and now counts him as a friend. “One of his goals has to be to make this a footnote in his obituary, and not make it the lead.”
A year later, a similar subject was touched upon in Spitzer's interview with Vanity Fair:
“Do you think the scandal will ever go away?,” I asked.
“No. My obituary’s written,” [Spitzer] replied with shocking finality. “And that is a very hard thing to live with.”
My question is, in light of his comeback and campaign for NYC comptroller: What would Spitzer have to do to not have his misdeeds lead his obit? Would he have to win this seat? Become mayor? President? Is there any hope for him?
I'd love to chat with any obit writers or editors you might be able to connect me with, whether via email or by phone at 212 508 0593.
Any help would be much appreciated!
Sunday, June 30, 2013
Ever Hopeful
"Writing obituaries is usually the first job a new reporter gets, a place to cut his or her teeth and learn the writing craft. Chomping at the bit to get to 'harder news,' reporters have long chafed at the seemingly boring job of compiling death notices. I am different in that I think writing an obituary is an honor and a respectful way to mark one person’s passage on this plane. I hope we all get a good one when our time comes." --Barbara Morgan
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Giving The Dead A Voice
Soundcite was produced by the Northwestern University Knight Lab as a way to make inline audio "easy and seamless" to produce. Simply record your audio file (in AIFF, WAVE, FLAC, OGG, MP2, MP3, AAC, AMR or WMA formats) and upload it to SoundCloud. Or, if you don't have your own audio, search the SoundCloud directory for the clip you need. Then, copy the file's URL into the Soundcite page, and it'll give you the embed code for the online version of your story.
For example, I wanted to add audio to my Christopher Hitchens obit. I searched SoundCloud and found that HachetteAudio had uploaded an excerpt from his memoir "Hitch 22." I grabbed the URL, pasted it into Soundcite and embedded the code into the obit. Very easy.
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Pet obits
I know the writer is going to go from puppyhood to dysplasia. Worst case scenario, I'll probably read about the expectant eyes on the trip to the vet's office at the end. "Are we going to the park?" None of that sort of thing appears in this obit of a golden retriever, written by Daniel Ruth of the Tampa Bay Times, who also just won a Pulitzer for his political columns.
Saturday, June 15, 2013
Something We Never Want To Experience
We regret that due to technical difficulties, the report on Nelson Mandela's death was unintentionally published. @dw_english
— DW (English) (@dw_english) June 14, 2013
(h/t Romenesko)
Thursday, June 13, 2013
What is the future of obits?
What are your thoughts?
(Note: Additional resources available at http://bit.ly/futureofobits)
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Missed The SPOW Conference In Toronto?
Monday, June 10, 2013
New Facebook Group for Grimsters!
On the new FB group page for grimsters, we have posted the names of the winners of the SPOW Awards which were presented during the SPOW Conference in Toronto this past weekend.
We'll post them on the Obituary Forum blog too, but we want to lure you to the FB group first.
More to come - both on this blog and our FB group page - on awards, the fabulous Toronto conference, future conferences, the future of SPOW and more!
Saturday, May 25, 2013
Riddle of the Labyrinth: a kind of extended obit
That beat does not normally make celebrities of its practitioners, so it says a lot about Fox’s writing ability that her obits have acquired something of a cult following. The form demands three things: a nose for interesting facts, the ability to construct a taut narrative arc, and a Dickens-level gift for concisely conveying personality.
Here is Fox's take on her craft and how she became interested in the work of Brooklyn College classics professor Alice Kober, who died in 1950. Her cursory, resume-like obit at the time barely mentions Linear B, an endless series of pictograms unearthed in ancient Greece no one could decipher. Yet Kober's largely unrecognized work over decades made cracking the code possible. Fox's newly released Riddle of the Labyrinth seems like the best kind of book to come out of newsrooms, in which writers decide to take a subject that's not due at 6 p.m. today and follow it wherever it leads.
Thursday, May 16, 2013
EBITS - the latest online obituary venture - fires a warning shot....
Thursday, May 09, 2013
Humorous Death Notices - an emerging subgenre?
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/nytimes/obituary.aspx?n=antonia-larroux&pid=164596250
Recall:
Harry Stamps
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/sunherald/obituary.aspx?pid=163538353
Relatedly - but not quite the same thing - the very funny Val Patterson who used his death notice to reveal his lack of PhD and his safe-stealing legacy
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/saltlaketribune/obituary.aspx?n=val-patterson&pid=158526785
From a couple years ago:
Michael "Flathead" Blanchard
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/denverpost/obituary.aspx?pid=156944598
Sunday, April 28, 2013
Obit contest deadline is May 4!
A friends's diligent search
By that definition alone, Roy Harris a former Wall Street Journal repoter and CFO magazine editor, figured his friend, artist Martyl Langsdorf, deserved more recognition than she got upon her death at 96. Langsdorf's "Doomsday clock" cover illustration for the June 1947 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists , the minute hand approaching midnight, became a symbol for the nuclear threat worldwide and, later, climate change.
But even as a seasoned journalist, Harris discovered that selling editors of the largest newspapers on the value of an obit subject is easier said than done. Here is his interesting account of his ultimately successful struggle to gain some recognition for a singular life.
Saturday, April 06, 2013
The Future of Obituaries
Thursday, April 04, 2013
New SPOW website
Wednesday, April 03, 2013
Society of Professional Obituary Writers Conference
The 2013 SPOW Conference will be held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, June 7-9, 2013.
Go to http://www.eventbrite.com/event/5639271212# for a bit more information and to register.
Return to Obituary Forum for more details to be provided by local host Ron Csillag and his Canadian team.
Monday, April 01, 2013
A couple of thoughts on the NY Times obit controversy
One more note: In discussion of this obit on the blog Jezebel, Andrea Tierson contributed this:
Maybe the Times was trying to humanize its subject. cf. the lede of the paper's Albert Einstein obit (1955):
"In 1904, Albert Einstein, then an obscure young man of 23, could be seen daily in the late afternoon wheeling a baby carriage on the streets of Bern, Switzerland, halting now and then, unmindful to the traffic around him, to scribble down some mathematical symbols in the notebook that shared the carriage with his infant son, also named Albert."
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/topics/einstein-obit.pdf
Looks like he's being noted as world's best dad before his scientific prowess is mentioned.
Here is what is known about a New York Times obituary on rocket scientist Yvonne Brill, and the Twitter outrage that followed.The story's original lede read as follows:
She made a mean beef stroganoff, followed her husband from job to job and took eight years off work to raise three children. 'The world's best mom,' her son Matthew said.
After a lot of outraged reactions on social media, the lede was subsequently changed to read:
She was a brilliant rocket scientist who followed her husband from job to job and took eight years off from work to raise three children. “The world’s best mom,” her son Matthew said.
"New York Times Changes Sexist Obit About Scientist Yvonne Brill," the Daily Beast proclaimed. "Responsive!" a Twitter follower noted approvingly.
Beyond reversing the order of her scientific and domestic lives and removing the stroganoff reference, the story remained unchanged.
Sullivan in a blog post today summarized her thoughts and the paper's decision to alter its lede. She cited an interesting and useful Columbia Journalism Review article which alerts writers to avoid gender stereotyping when writing about female scientists; spoke with Martin and William McDonald, his editor (both of whom stood behind the original story); and concluded that framing the story as one about gender "had the effect of undervaluing what really landed Mrs. Brill on the Times obituaries page: her groundbreaking scientific work."
As an early and lonely defender of this obit, I would like to make just a few points:
The CJR article Sullivan cited as instructive in avoiding gender stereotypes quotes one of its primary sources saying it is legitimate in her view to bring gender discrimination issues into a profile of a woman in science:
For instance, if you’re writing a story about sexism in science or about the gender gap in leadership roles in science or you’re writing about sex-related issues specifically.
What’s not ok is to turn a story about a scientist’s professional life into one about her personal life or her gender roles..
Brill was denied the option of majoring in her chosen field of engineering at the University of Manitoba, ostensibly due to a lack of accommodations. While I understand that obits about any minority or underrepresented group present ready-made cliches for the taking -- and that one of these can be that the subject "overcame barriers" -- not being able to major in your chosen field to me seems like an obstacle worth reporting.
No fair reading of Martin's obit could lead one to conclude that Brill's many contributions, from developing more efficient rocket thrusters to contributing to rocket and satellite designs -- work that landed her in the Inventors Hall of Fame -- were remarkable because, as the CJR piece correctly warns us against doing, "She accomplished all of this while being a woman!"
The stroganoff lede that aroused so much controversy sets up a different, and more complicated, kind of contrast -- between a woman who preferred to be addressed as "Mrs.," and who embraced some of those societal norms about gender while, yes, overcoming them.
Also on Monday, writer Paul Carr on pandodaily took on what he called "readers of the Daily Internet Outrage Memo." It's an interesting take, and the points he makes about writing are particularly relevant.
At the same time, I would not dismiss objections to the original lede as groundless. I can see how it looks: after a century of consciousness raising about gender equality and seemingly great strides forward, an eminent newspaper bends over backwards to link a brilliant female scientist to her cooking.
I just think a lot of the people protesting this are getting the story wrong.
Saturday, March 16, 2013
Society of Professional Obituary Writers Conference
Go to http://www.eventbrite.com/event/5639271212# for a bit more information and to register.
Return to Obituary Forum for more details to be provided by local host Ron Csillag and his Canadian team.
Friday, March 15, 2013
Thanks to Marilyn Johnson, our supporter and author of The Dead Beat, for suggesting that Eli interview me. Through the Harry Stamps obit that has gone viral, interest in obits is, as they say, trending. His obit and the reaction to it have prompted many follow-up articles and columns on the back story.
I recently gave a talk on family-written death notice and now consider myself ambidextobitrous: I work both sides of the obits street. Hoping to see you all in Toronto.
Tuesday, March 05, 2013
SPOW member in the running for literary prize
Martin's book, Working the Dead Beat: 50 Lives that Changed Canada (House of Anansi Press, September 2012), offers a historical view of Canada through the lives of individuals she had written about. In book length, she accomplishes what cannot be done in a newspaper obituary -- present a fuller context of what she calls "transformative lives." Subjects include Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, economist John Kenneth Galbraith, and urban theorist Jane Jacobs.
Martin offers "a select history of Canada told through extended obituaries of both the known and the unknown, researched energetically and written graciously," writes Canadian journalist Paula Todd. "Her tone is thoughtful, her scolding scant, and almost all of the transformative Canadians are presented in the context of their own struggles."
Author Ted Barris, a journalism professor at Centennial College in Toronto and a veteran CBC radio contributor, calls Martin "the obit queen of Canada." Working the Dead Beat includes Sandra's reflections on what she has learned from writing obituaries. You can find her discussing the book here and, briefly, here.
Congratulations to Sandra on this important book!
Sunday, March 03, 2013
Grimmies: Awards for Outstanding Obituary Writing
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Grimmies: SPOW Awards |
These will be SPOW’s first awards following the death beaters’ reorganization hiatus.
SPOW yet lives!
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Csillag |
SPOW also plans to go ahead with its annual awards - the SPOW Awards, a.k.a. Grimmies - honoring outstanding obit work published in 2011 and 2012. Another post (to be posted shortly) will provide details on that. In the meantime, dig up your obits published in those years for consideration. Outgoing SPOW director Alana Baranick (that would be me) is serving as contest coordinator.
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Powell |
Kay Powell, retired Atlanta Journal Constitution obits editor and winner of several SPOW Awards, including the Lifetime Achievement Award, will handle Lifetime Achievement nominations. More on that soon too.
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Meacham |
The SPOW website - www.obitwriters.org - will soon disappear from the Internet. The Obituary Forum blog and the general SPOW email - obitwriters.org@gmail.com - will serve as the best means for reaching SPOW.
Keep checking back for more SPOW news.
Friday, March 01, 2013
New Book Features An Obit Writer As The Protagonist
So begins "The Obituary Writer," a new book by Ann Hood. The story focuses on the lives of two women: one is an unhappy housewife living in the early 1960s, the other is an obituary writer living in 1919 and searching for her missing lover.
Described as part-literary mystery and part-love story, "The Obituary Writer" will be released on March 4.
Saturday, January 12, 2013
An Awesome Introduction To The Death Beat
On Jan. 19, SPJ South Florida will fake three deaths. Participants will take a crash course in obit writing with Miami Herald obituary writer Elinor Brecher, then spend the afternoon attending a mock memorial at an area funeral home, interviewing arrivals about the deceased and eating dessert. Afterwards, the reporters will head to the newsroom of the South Florida Gay News and write their stories.
All obits will be judged by Brecher and the "deceased." The writer of the best obit will win an awesome urn filled with the ashes of pages burned from local newspapers.
"Why are we doing this? Because it can be argued that few stories are more important than those summing up a life just concluded. Yet few journalists are taught how to write obituaries. So while we’re obviously having some fun with the process, we’re quite serious about the topic. You will learn something by the end of the day," Michael Koretzky stated.
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
Appreciation For An Obit Writer
"You haven’t seen her name in the bright lights of our newspaper because her writing doesn’t require a byline. Most of our readers wouldn’t know her if they saw her. But she has been there writing. Five days a week for 22 years. Always steady. Always professional. Always compassionate."Click here to read the rest of the article.