Cory Taylor was born in Queensland in 1955. She was an award-winning novelist and screenwriter who also published short fiction and children's books. Her first novel, Me and Mr Booker, won the Commonwealth Writers' Prize (Pacific Region) in 2012 and her second novel, My Beautiful Enemy, was shortlisted for the Miles Franklin Award in 2014. She died on 5 July 2016, a couple of months after Dying- A Memoir was published.
`This small, powerful book offers a clean engagement with life's conclusion: with clarity and courage, the author finds words to escort us towards silence.' * Hilary Mantel * 'It takes courage to contemplate one's death and extraordinary clarity and generosity to write about it like this. Dying: A Memoir is a gift to us all, a book that is not afraid to navigate darkness and that sees us through to the end...We need books like this, a guide to dying, but also, and especially, a guide to living.' * Australian Book Review * `2016 has seen the publication of a number of exceptional books by beautiful writers whose poignant tales takes us right to the edge of the abyss.' * Best Books of 2016, Australian Financial Review * `Along with the precision of her writing, it is Taylor's lack of self-righteousness that lends this book its very special quality.' * Guardian * `Taylor's challenging, touching, sad story about her dying, is a eulogic tribute to her immense talent, but one that leaves practical comfort to us all.' * Australian Women's Weekly * `A clear analysis of the dying process and another important contribution to the debate about drug assisted euthanasia... [Taylor's] memoir offers as much insight and reflection as anyone could deliver in just 150 pages.' * HealthSpeak * `Dying is a powerful, passionate, unflinching memoir about facing death and the choices and difficulty and beauty that entails. It should be required reading for all of us.' * Ann Hood, author of Comfort: A Journey Through Grief * `[Taylor] commands a glorious structure and control. She arrives at the edge of the words and in her final paragraphs performs an alchemical transformation of her book's imagery and metaphors and moments into something light and quite transcendent - the whole not only surpassing the sum of its parts but illuminating them with a magnificent blaze.' * Australian * `A fine and sorrowful finale.' * Sydney Morning Herald * 'It takes courage to contemplate one's death and extraordinary clarity and generosity to write about it like this. Dying: A Memoir is a gift to us all, a book that is not afraid to navigate darkness and that sees us through to the end...We need books like this, a guide to dying, but also, and especially, a guide to living.' * Australian Book Review * `Funny, insightful and, most of all, consoling. It does what all great writing does: makes you instantly feel less alone. It's the best thing I've read this year.' -- Benjamin Law * Good Weekend * `Cory Taylor's book is both a precise and moving memoir about the randomness of family, and an admirable intellectual response to the randomness of life and death. We should all hope for as vivid a looking-back, and as cogent a looking-forward, when we reach the end ourselves.' * Julian Barnes * `This is a powerful, poignant and lucid last testament, at once an eloquent plea for autonomy in death, and an evocation of the joys, sorrows and sheer unpredictability and precariousness of life. Taylor wonders if she has found the `right tone' for her story. Her readers will find that she has. It's a fine contribution to our much-needed dialogue with death.' * Margaret Drabble *