
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


John Kenney may not consider himself a humor writer, but his novel about a divorced obituary writer who accidentally posts his own obituary is very funny. In this interview, Kenney talks about why he loves writing about “middle-aged, slightly broken men,” the role of humor in coping with grief, how he became a contributor to The New Yorker after years of trying, and what contemporary novel he’s read four times and will probably read again.
By Karen DukessJohn Kenney may not consider himself a humor writer, but his novel about a divorced obituary writer who accidentally posts his own obituary is very funny. In this interview, Kenney talks about why he loves writing about “middle-aged, slightly broken men,” the role of humor in coping with grief, how he became a contributor to The New Yorker after years of trying, and what contemporary novel he’s read four times and will probably read again.