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  • Published: 15 May 2016
  • ISBN: 9781910701935
  • Imprint: Harvill Press
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 176
  • RRP: $48.00

The Death Of A Beekeeper




‘A beautiful work, lyrical and bleak, resonant and terse’ – New Yorker

In the beginning of the winter thaw, Lars Lennart Westin has learned that he will not live through the spring. Told through the journals of this schoolteacher turned apiarist, The Death of a Beekeeper is his gentle, courageous, and sometimes comic meditation on living with pain.

Westin has refused to surrender the time left to him to the impersonality of a hospital, preferring to take his fate upon himself, to continue his solitary, reflective life in the Swedish countryside. While he watches his inner landscape reforming, the relentlessly intimate burning in his gut provides a point of psychological detachment. 'We begin again,' he insists, 'we never give up.'

  • Published: 15 May 2016
  • ISBN: 9781910701935
  • Imprint: Harvill Press
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 176
  • RRP: $48.00

About the author

Lars Gustafsson

Lars Gustafsson was born in Västerås, Sweden, in 1936. After taking a doctor’s degree at the University of Uppsala in 1962 he became editor of the leading literary periodical Bonniers Litterära Magasin. His publications reflect a broad range of interest and expertise, extending through philosophy, history, sociology and mathematics, as well as literary criticism, poetry, short stories and novels.

His fiction published by Harvill includes The Death of a Beekeeper, The Tale of a Dog, and A Tiler's Afternoon, which was shortlisted for the Dublin International Impac Award and was described by the Independent as ‘a beautifully conceived poetic allegory about an artist's life'.

Also by Lars Gustafsson

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Praise for The Death Of A Beekeeper

This thoughtful and beautifully written novel… We cannot fail to be moved

Diana Hinds, Independent

Has all the lyric intensity we have come to associate with Scandinavian films…It is full of spirit, observation, insight, sadness, struggle, pain and, inevitably, of hope

Frieda McGreal, Yorkshire Post

Sensitive and vivid

Wendy Jennings, Church Times

The landscape of pain has never been defined more graphically… A disturbing, moving and thought-provoking novel that stays in the mind long after it is read

Jewish News

It is brilliant: an evocative book of exquisite beauty and exceptional wisdom… Hope is the theme of the novel, and it is explored sensitively, intelligently and philosophically by an author who knows the impact of simple, precise language… Art can change the way we see the world and Gustafsson is a fine, fine artist

Ken Spillman, West Australian

A beautiful work, lyrical and bleak, resonant and terse

New Yorker