Michael Dirda says the best obituaries “juxtapose obvious public accomplishments with the sheer strangeness of people’s lives.”
I think he’s right. I think the same is true of stories about fictional people.
Take Sherlock Holmes, for example. Catching criminals is some kind of public accomplishment, but does that make for a good life, an interesting life? It’s hard to say. But if you add that achievement to an eccentric personality, you have something.
Holmes’s crime solving was good, but I kept reading when I learned he kept his correspondence pinned to the mantel with a jackknife and kept his stash of shag tobacco stuffed in a carpet slipper.
Dirda quotes Chekhov’s line that only a god could see the difference between success and failure in life.
It’s one reason we read obituaries. We want to know about the kind of lives other people have led, the experiments other people have tried.
• Michael Dirda, “What reading about dead people tells us about life”; The Washington Post, Jan. 16, 2025. It’s here:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2025/01/16/joy-obituaries-reading-dirda/