
Episode 312 with Amber Sparks, Author of Happy People Don't Live Here, and Creator of Wonderfully Weird Characters, Resonant Settings, and Clever Page-Turners
Notes and Links to Amber Sparks’ Work
Amber Sparks is the author of the short story collections And I Do Not Forgive You and The Unfinished World. Her writing has appeared in The Paris Review, Granta, Slate, and elsewhere. She lives in Washington, D.C., with her husband, daughter, and cats. Happy People Don’t Live Here was published in October 2025.
Buy Happy People Don't Live Here
Kirkus Reviews of Happy People Don't Live Here
At about 1:20, Amber describes the “weird” time about a month after the book’s publication, an in-between time
At about 2:25, Amber talks about the feedback she has received since the book was published, including surprising thoughts shared about the child narrator and the “other” narrator, Alice
At about 5:25, Amber talks about her influences growing up, including fantasy and writers like Dean Koontz
At about 7:40, Amber talks about her inclination to write a book featuring multiple genres, with the result being Happy People Don’t Live Here
At about 9:20, Amber responds to Pete asking about plot and allegory and their balance
At about 11:35, Amber shouts out Kelly Link, Rion Amicar-Scott, Stephen Graham-Jones, and Matt Bell as a few of many contemporary writers she loves
At about 14:35, Amber and Pete discuss the book’s resonant epigraphs, and Amber talks about her interest in ghosts
At about 18:00, Pete shouts out the classic story “Someone Has Been Disarranging these Roses”
At about 19:15, Amber explains her chapters and the rationale in making the book “episodic”
At about 20:50, The book’s beginning and connections to real-life events is discussed
At about 24:35, The two discuss one of the book’s main character, Fern
At about 27:10, Pete compliments the book’s setting, and Amber provides background for the place
At about 30:00, the two discuss the book’s inciting incident, a body discovered by Fern, and Amber expands on the ways she went about populating the book
At about 35:40, some key characters are discussed, including a possible love interest for Alice
At about 36:40, Amber responds to Pete’s question about Alice’s ex-husband as a sort of flat character-she calls him a “cipher”
At about 40:10, Amber reflects on Alice’s ways of avoiding the past and running from this past, and Amber shouts out William H. Macy in Magnolia
At about 43:50, the two discuss the “banal” ghost
At about 47:00, parent-child relationships are discussed
At about 51:20, Pete asks Amber about writing in second-person, as she does for part of her book-shout out to Lorrie Moore!
At about 55:40, Amber talks about exciting new projects
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Please tune in for Episode 313 with Jackie Domenus, a queer writer from South Jersey and the author of NO OFFENSE: A MEMOIR IN ESSAYS (2025), published with ELJ Editions. A 2021 Tin House Winter Workshop graduate, Jackie’s essays have appeared in The HuffPost, The Offing Mag, The Normal School, Pidgeonholes, Foglifter Journal, Variant Lit, Entropy, and many more. Their poetry has appeared in Hooligan Mag and Giving Room Mag. Her short story “Mirror Image” published in So To Speak, as well as her essay “Two Truths and a Lie” published in Identity Theory, were both nominated for a Pushcart Prize.
The episode airs on December 2.
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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