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  • Published: 2 July 2012
  • ISBN: 9780241958032
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 240

The Apartment




A stunning first novel about the costs of war and the mysteries of friendship

'She was always in many places at once, invested deeply in a hundred different notions, and of all the things I liked about Saskia that was the thing I liked most'

One snowy morning in an old European capital, a man wakes in a hotel room. A young local woman he has befriended calls to the hotel, and the two of them head out into the snow to find the man an apartment to rent.

Greg Baxter's astonishing first novel tells the story of these two people on this day - and the old stories that brought them to where they are. Its magically subtle and intense narrative takes them across the frozen city and into the past that the man is hoping to escape, and leaves them at the doorstep of an uncertain future. The Apartment is a book about war, the relationship between America and the rest of the world, and the brittle foundations of Western culture; but above all it is a book about the mysteries and alchemies of friendship - truthful, moving and brilliant.

  • Published: 2 July 2012
  • ISBN: 9780241958032
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 240

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.

Also by Greg Baxter

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Praise for The Apartment

Admirable for its scope, ambition and unashamed seriousness of purpose, as well as its willingness to take stylistic and structural risks

Julie Myerson, Observer

A wonderful, horrible, wise novel

Dazed & Confused (Book of the Month)

Stunningly good

Susan Jeffreys, Saturday Review, BBC Radio 4

Imagine you're on a roller-coaster ... suddenly, without warning, it tips vertiginously, so quickly that your chest constricts and while you're there, suspended, momentarily, at the apex of this roller-coaster, you're aware suddenly of a kind of clarity, a totally new perspective on everything below. Greg Baxter's The Apartment is a bit like this ... Full of unshowy wisdom and surprising moments of beauty

Sunday Telegraph

Baxter's superbly elegant, understated writing explores the dynamics of America's relationship with the rest of the world

The Times

His protagonist is not merely struggling beneath the weight of the violence in his own life story; he grapples with the larger sense of history that infuses the text with an effect that recalls WG Sebald. ... There's a maturity to The Apartment not often found in debut novels.

Lucy Scholes, The Independent

Exceptional - a book rich in ideas and poetry. Its power is accumulative and it moves with a calm and yet inevitable progress. It is a deeply mysterious and admirable book.

Hisham Matar

The Apartment is a small novel - but it's actually huge. Clever, entertaining, brave; it stretches the rules while following a man through one day of his life. I loved it.

Roddy Doyle

An interesting, honourable novel

James Lasdun, The Guardian

The Apartment is a wonderfully beguiling novel, evoking to perfection that sense of eerie possibility one has when in a strange city. Its account of a new friendship poised on the edge of love is superbly sure-footed.

Adam Thorpe

Beautiful. Magnificent. Heartbreaking. Greg Baxter is a true original.

Ian Sansom

A stunning book - beautifully constructed, elegantly written and deeply felt

Stuart Evers

The Apartment is a mesmerising story of lostness, friendship and dwelling. Both breathtaking and hauntingly beautiful, Greg Baxter's first novel is as crisp and joyful as freshly fallen snow.

Lee Rourke

A writer of considerable gifts ... Baxter, who now lives in Berlin, is so good at conjuring up the atmosphere of his chilly and crowded city (probably Eastern European and probably fictional) and the character of its inhabitants that you come to feel that you're living there among them in their noisy, bustling cafes and their freezing thoroughfares. ... Baxter shows mastery, too, in his vividly realised characters, especially the charming Saskia

Irish Independent

A dark and sinewy novel, written with sparse clarity and affecting subtlety

Stuart Evers, Observer Books of the Year