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Paul Murray reads a funny book at Word on Sunday

Paul Murray reads a funny book at Word on Sunday

This writer is deadly funny.

Paul Murray has equally charmed and haunted readers with his praised comic novel, “Skippy Dies,” set at a Dublin boys’ school.

That title’s no spoiler alert; within five pages of the Irish novelist’s wildly entertaining book, which was longlisted for this year’s Man Booker Prize, Daniel “Skippy” Juster, a shy 14-year-old student, meets his tragicomic demise on the floor of a doughnut shop.

From there, Murray flashes back to the preceding months, from the perspective of the school’s hormone-fueled boys, apathetic teachers, female love interests, and the nerdy, quantum physics-loving Ruprecht Van Doren, whose own life is upended by the death of his friend and roommate.

In addition to its plethora of gay jokes, “Skippy Dies” is deeper and poignant than any book about teenage boys has the right to be — a fact the author himself is well aware of.

“My brain seems to find it quite natural to slip from one register to the other,” said Murray, who crosses the pond to read at Greenpoint’s Word Bookshop on Dec. 5. “I tried to make sure that although the opening chapters are largely comic, the tragic elements are visible to some degree, too. That’s partly why Skippy dies on page five. It’s unambiguous.”

But don’t worry, it’s still OK to laugh.

Paul Murray at Word [126 Franklin St. at Milton Street in Greenpoint, (718) 383-0096], Dec. 5 at 7 pm. Free. For info, visit www.wordbrooklyn.com.