
Episode 322 with Peter Orner, Author of The Gossip Columnist's Daughter and Maestro of the Offbeat, the Original, the Creative, and the Resonant
Notes and Links to Peter Orner’s Work
Peter Orner is the author of eight books, most recently the novel, The Gossip Columnist’s Daughter, named one of the best books of 2025 by the New Yorker and the Chicago Tribune, as well as the essay collections, Still No Word from You, a finalist for the PEN Award for the Art of the Essay, and Am I Alone Here?, a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism. His story collection Maggie Brown and Others was a New York Times Notable Book. Other books include Love and Shame and Love (Winner of the California Book Award) Last Car Over the Sagamore Bridge, The Second Coming of Mavala Shikongo (finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Award), and Esther Stories. A recipient of the Rome Prize and a Guggenheim Fellowship, Orner is also the editor of three books of oral history for the Voice of Witness series, and co-editor with Laura Lampton Scott of a new oral history series from McSweeney’s called “Dispatches.” His work has appeared in The New Yorker, the Atlantic, Harper’s, the Paris Review and has been awarded four Pushcart Prizes. With Yvette Benavides, he’s the co-host of the Lonely Voice Podcast on Texas Public Radio. Orner recently led short courses on James Joyce’s Ulysses, and Melville’s Moby-Dick for the Community of Writers/Writers’ Annex. He teaches at Dartmouth College and lives in Vermont.
Buy The Gossip Columnist’s Daughter
New York Times Review of The Gossip Columnist’s Daughter
At about 2:30, Peter responds to Pete’s question about the feedback he’s gotten since the publication of
At about 3:30, Peter expands on ideas of making Chicago concrete for his readers
At about 4:40, Peter gives background on family’s roots in Chicago and in Eastern Europe
At about 6:25, Mike Ditka slander?!
At about 7:50, Peter highlights Saul Bellow as a writer who influenced him, as well as Stuart Dybek, Betty Howland, and John Irving among others
At about 10:05, Peter reflects on David Foster Wallace as an “Illinois writer”
At about 12:10, Peter discusses Zadie Smith and Yiyun Li, and as impressive and chill-inducing contemporary writers
At about 13:30, Peter lists some reading favorites of his university students, and he expands on how they are “blown away” by James Joyce’s work
At about 15:00, The two fanboy over James Joyce’s “The Dead”
At about 16:15, Peter reflects on Pete asking if his The Gossip Columnist’s Daughter would be classified as “historical fiction”
At about 17:15, Peter expands on his view of the book’s epigraph from Chekhov
At about 18:15, Pete cites another great epigraph and great book from Jess Walter
At about 18:50, The two lay out the book’s exposition, and Peter describes the book’s inciting incident, a tragic death
At about 20:20, The two discuss the book’s beginning as in medias res
At about 21:30, Peter talks about the character of Babs as inspired by grandmother, and Pete shares about his Chicago grandfather’s longevity
At about 22:55, Peter expands on the idea of Jed, the book’s narrator, feeling that three key events in 1963 were a pivot point for the family
At about 26:15, Jack Ruby and the provinciality and “small world” of Chicago
At about 29:10, Pete and Peter lay out Jed’s college professor setup
At about 30:00, Peter explains the cause of death and theories and conspiracy theories around it
At about 31:35, Peter responds to Pete’s musings about the old-fashioned “imperative” headlines that
At about 33:00, Some of Cookie Kupcinet’s last writings are discussed
At about 34:30, Peter reflects on the travails and pressures of Cookie
At about 36:00, Some of the prodigious pull of Irv Kupcinet is discussed, and Pete compares Irv’s work to that of Ace in Casino
At about 37:55, Lou Rosenthal’s reticence and kinship with Robert Todd Lincoln are discussed
At about 39:00, Peter expands on a scene in which the “grieving” narrator walks by the house where his ex-wife and daughter live; he discusses the importance he places on place
At about 41:40, Sidney Korshak and his historical background and Chicago connection is discussed
At about 44:10, The two discuss doubts in the story about the way in which Cookie died
At about 45:20, Cookie’s legacy and the ways in which Jed, the narrator, gains a sort of obsession with conspiracy theories and marginalia
At about 48:20, Peter talks about the book’s storyline as a “family story” and using a “tiny kernel” as a “jump off” point for his book
At about 49:20, Peter responds to Pete’s questions about the state of the current conspiracy theories involving the Kupcinets and JFK’s assassination
At about 51:20, The two discuss the breakup of the friendship between the Rosenthals and Kupcinets, as Pete compares a turned-down piece of writing to the book’s storyline
At about 53:20, Peter reflects on the intrigue that comes with
At about 55:00, Peter expands on the “Captain” moniker his grandfather have, and that he played off in his book
At about 58:20, The two reflect on the memorable character of Solly
At about 1:01:00, Theories involving traumas and low points and broken relationships are discussed
At about 1:03:00, Pete highlights a resonant last scene
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Please tune in for Episode 323 with second-time guest Luke Epplin. He is the author Our Team: The Epic Story of Four Men and the World Series That Changed Baseball and Moses and the Doctor: Two Men, One Championship, and the Birth of Modern Basketball.
The episode airs on February 13, three days after Pub Day for Moses and the Doctor.
Please go to ceasefiretoday.org, and/or https://act.uscpr.org/a/letaidin to call your congresspeople and demand an end to the forced famine and destruction of Gaza and the Gazan people.
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