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Michael J. Rosen
The
editor of More Mirth of a Nation: The Best Contemporary Humor, Michael
J. Rosen has been called the unofficial organizer of the National
Humor Writer's Union, a pretty good idea for an organization that
could offer all kinds of benefits to its struggling members (currently
numbering more than 300 who have never been published in The New
Yorker or aired on NPR). He has been called other things as well,
like in third grade, and then in seventh grade especially, by certain
older kids known as "hoods," who made his life miserable,
specifically during gym class, lunch period and after school.
Later, much
later, the Washington Post called him a "fidosopher" because
of his extensive publications on dogs, dog training, and dog-besotted
people. The New York Times called him an example of creative philanthropy
in their special "Giving" section for persuading "writers,
artists, photographers and illustrators to contribute their time
and talents to books" that benefit Share Our Strength's anti-hunger
efforts and animal-welfare causes. As an author of a couple dozen
books for children, he's been called...okay, enough with the calling
business.
For nearly twenty years, he served as literary director at the Thurber
House, a cultural center in the restored home of James Thurber.
Garrison Keillor, bless his heart, called it (sorry) "the capital
of American humor." While there, Rosen helped to create The
Thurber Prize for American Humor, a national book award for humor
writing, and edited four anthologies of Thurber's previously unpublished
and uncollected work, most recently The Dog Department: James Thurber
on Hounds, Scotties and Talking Poodles, happily published by HarperCollins
as well.
In his capacity as editor for this biennial, Rosen reads manuscripts
year round, beseeching and beleaguering the nation's most renowned
and well-published authors, and fending off the rants and screeds
from folks who've discovered the ease of self-publishing on the
web. Last summer, Rosen edited a lovely book, 101 Damnations: The
Humorists' Tour of Personal Hells; while some critics (all right,
one rather outspoken friend) considered this a book of complaints,
Rosen has argued that humor, like voting and picketing and returning
an appliance that "worked" all of four months before requiring
a repair that costs twice the purchase price, humor is about the
desire for change. It's responding to the way things are compared
to the way you'd like things to be. And it's a much more convivial
response than pouting or cornering unsuspecting guests at dinner
parties.
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