July–August 2008, no. 303
The Household Guide to Dying
by Christina Hill •
The Household Guide to Dying by Debra Adelaide
Picador, $32.95 pb, 395 pp
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Why are there so many books about death and dying appearing at the moment? Is it about the baby boomers facing up to their mortality? It is certainly a subject that interests me, and Debra Adelaide’s novel should be compelling. Unfortunately, I found its determined flippancy laboured and grating. The first-person narrator, Delia, a writer of household guides, is not yet forty. Given a bad prognosis for her breast cancer, she decides that her last work will be a guide to dying, in which she will record her physical and emotional journey.
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