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A Preparation for Death
  • Published: 30 August 2010
  • ISBN: 9780141962580
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 224

A Preparation for Death



A gripping, hilarious, heartbreaking tale of personal decay and redemption through reading, teaching and truth

'Traditional autobiography is composed after the experience has passed. I wrote this book in the very panic of the experiences that inspired it ... '

In his early thirties, Greg Baxter found himself in a strange place. He hated his job, he was drinking excessively, he was sabotaging his most important relationships, and he was no longer doing the thing he cared about most: writing. Strangest of all, at this time he started teaching evening classes in creative writing - and his life changed utterly.

A Preparation for Death is a document of the chaos and discovery of that time and of the experiences that led Greg Baxter to that strange place - an extraordinarily intimate account of literary failure (and its consequences), personal decay, and redemption through reading, writing, and truth-telling. Studded with vivid, loving portraits of the people closest to him - his Austrian grandmother, who narrowly survived the Second World War; his mother and father, both described with heartbreakingly close attention; and his cousin Walter, whose own demons provide a striking counterpoint to the author's - it is above all a stunningly vivid and searching self-portrait: possibly the most honest book you'll ever read.

  • Published: 30 August 2010
  • ISBN: 9780141962580
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 224

About the author

Greg Baxter

Greg Baxter was born in Texas in 1974. His first book, A Preparation for Death, published in 2010, was acclaimed by Anne Enright, James Lasdun, David Shields, and William Leith, among others. The Apartment has been widely acclaimed around the world, and Munich Airport will be published in the UK in July. He has published essays and stories in The Dublin Review, Five Dials, and The White Review. Over the last twenty years he's lived in Germany, Austria, Ireland and England. He now lives in Berlin.

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