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  • Published: 3 July 2014
  • ISBN: 9780241969977
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 288

Munich Airport





A story for our time: about the meaning of home and the families we improvise when our our real families fall apart

An American expat in London, about to enter a meeting, takes a phone call. The caller is a German policewoman. The news she has to convey is almost incomprehensible: the man's sister, Miriam, has been found dead in her Berlin flat, of starvation.

Three weeks later, the man, his elderly father, and an American consular official find themselves in an almost unbearably strange place: a fogbound Munich Airport, where Miriam's coffin is to be loaded onto a commercial jet. Greg Baxter's extraordinary novel tells the story of these three people over those three weeks of waiting for Miriam's body to be released, sifting through her possessions, and trying to work out what could have led her to her awful death.

Munich Airport is a novel about the meaning of home, and about the families we improvise when our real families fall apart. It is a gripping, daring and mesmeric read from one of the most gifted young novelists currently at work.

  • Published: 3 July 2014
  • ISBN: 9780241969977
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 288

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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Praise for Munich Airport

It's a testament to Baxter's skills that so plotless a novel manages to retain such pace and poise...There's something mesmerising about the prose

Observer