Photos from Reading at Doorn, the Netherlands.
Author Archives: SJW
Alle, alle lieben dich (Songs for the Missing in German)
A discussion with Susanne Lettenbauer of NDR Kultur (Northern German Radio) regarding Songs for the Missing, 1/16/2009.
A Revolutionary Novelist
ABC National Radio, The Book Show (Australia), 1/29/2009, featuring Stewart O’Nan and Blake Bailey:
Sometimes it takes a Hollywood blockbuster to bring an American masterpiece back into print. That’s exactly what happened with Revolutionary Road, the 1961 work of troubled writer Richard Yates. The novel may have been critically acclaimed at the time, but had it not been for this year’s movie adaptation, most of us would never have heard of it.
Reviews: Songs for the Missing
This post will be updated with reviews as they come in.
What’s most remarkable about Songs for the Missing is the fact that O’Nan’s great interest in cold, factual detail never prevents him from making the emotional lives of his characters the primary focus of his attention. [Read more]
This is a fine, absorbing book. It’s easy to imagine that O’Nan is on a kind of mission to restore a simple, true sense of humanity to the novel: a worthy goal, indeed. [Read more]
Some books should come with warnings. That’s not a complaint, at least in the case of Stewart O’Nan’s haunting novel Songs for the Missing, which kept me up most of the night. [Read more]
The Boston Globe:
Connecticut author Stewart O’Nan is the literary equivalent of what baseball calls a spray hitter, the type of batter who can drive a ball onto the green between the chalk lines in any part of the park to get on base. [Read more]
The book’s emotional power is undeniable, as each character grieves for Kim, wanting her disappearance to mean something beyond “the world’s incoherence.” In the midst of that search, they elegiacally discover a little of what has been missing among themselves. [Read more]
The Free-Lance Star (Fredericksburg, VA):
O’Nan has an uncanny ability to show the still life in detail that we take for granted. The characters that O’Nan creates are so lifelike that one tends to forget that they are fictional. In “Songs for the Missing” it has an unnerving effect. [Read more]
O’Nan Finds His Themes Among Many Influences
From The St. Petersburg Times:
Stewart O’Nan has found a lot of his inspiration as a writer in “all the things my mom said weren’t good for me: comic books, Stephen King, being a Red Sox fan,” he says.
“TV and movies — love them, love them, love them. George Romero’s Night of the Living Dead really inspired me, because it’s a do-it-yourself movie.
“It’s all about gulping in stories, learning to use your imagination.”
O’Nan will be the keynote speaker Saturday night at Writers in Paradise, the annual writers conference at Eckerd College in St. Petersburg.























