The Death and Life of August Sweeney by Samuel Ashworth

This book has not been indexed yet...

Notes about this book

This book does not currently have any notes.

You must Create an Account or Sign In to add a note to this book.

Reviews about this book

This book does not currently have any reviews.

  • ISBN 10 1951631412
  • ISBN 13 9781951631413
  • Published Mar 20 2025
  • Format Paperback
  • Page Count 316
  • Language English
  • Countries United States
  • Publisher Independently published

Publishers Text

"One of the most sumptuous and inventive novels I've read in years. I flew through this book." --Tania James, author of Loot

"In life and in death, the body offers a map of our experience. In August Sweeney, Samuel Ashworth takes us on a journey of how the hard living of a chef is both a joy and a punishment. I loved it." --Tom Colicchio

A novel about fame, food, and forensics unlike anything you've read before.

On the night he dies, August Sweeney is just pulling himself out of the weeds in the restaurant that was supposed to be his comeback. An immense man of immense appetites, August worked his way up from the bowels of a greasy spoon in Queens to international culinary stardom, and his fall, when it came, left a crater visible from space. When Dr. Maya Zhu, a guarded, intense autopsist, is summoned to investigate, she discovers she must operate under strict conditions Sweeney himself dictated before he died. Over the course of a single day, Zhu's fate becomes forever tied to Sweeney's, and her life, and his death, will change in ways she never imagined. For August Sweeney isn't about to let a little thing like death stop him from raising hell.

This is a novel of fame, food, and forensics: The Bear meets Bones. It's a book to make you hungry and ease your fear of death. Ashworth spent weeks working as a prep cook in a Michelin-starred restaurant in France, and learning to perform autopsies at a hospital in Pittsburgh. The result is an unprecedentedly accurate depiction of the restaurant industry, as well as a true New York novel, spanning fifty years of the city's turbulent growth. More than anything, it's a book about the body and its appetites, one that forces us to rethink what it means to live, and what it means to die.