Monopolies of loss /

"Writing fiction about Aids calls for a sustained effort of adjustment, but then so does everything else to do with the epidemic.' So writes Adam Mars-Jones in his introduction to this brave and astonishing book, whose eloquence confers a subtle human dimension on an immense, often faceles...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mars-Jones, Adam, 1954- (Author)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 1993.
Edition:First American edition.
Subjects:
Description
Summary:"Writing fiction about Aids calls for a sustained effort of adjustment, but then so does everything else to do with the epidemic.' So writes Adam Mars-Jones in his introduction to this brave and astonishing book, whose eloquence confers a subtle human dimension on an immense, often faceless crisis. In stories that unfold quietly, with familiarity and domesticity, he assembles a remarkable cast of characters - all of whom are dealing, either peripherally or explicitly, with the central disease of our time. Mars-Jones conveys the horrors of life during the plague through subversive fiction that aims to destroy the truly unconscionable notion of gay life as alien or other. Here are people - patients, lovers, even strangers - whom we recognize as our own, as family and friends. 'Slim' is a portrait of a volunteer 'buddy'- young, healthy, simple - as seen by the wracked man he accompanies. In 'An Executor' we hear the ruminations of a man appointed to remove suspicious garments from a dying friend's closet, lest his grieving parents be shocked. Or in 'Summer Lightning, ' a bittersweet story of an unexpected death that comes while two friends sunbathe at the beach. An everyday accident that shatters a couple's carefully suspended brooding on mortality. A man's tape-recorded thoughts, in his last days, about the pleasures of his lovers, the advice of the hospital, and the slow dream-time he has fallen into: 'Imagination is the last thing to fail me.'. Each of these stories possesses its own startling force; their combined impact in this collection is staggering. As The Guardian has written, 'Adam Mars-Jones is the Wilfrid Owen of the new long-drawn and deadly trench warfare ... He describes and exemplifies courage, tenderness and defiance."
Item Description:Originally published in the United Kingdom by Faber & Faber, London, in 1992.
The Cushing Library/Women & Gender Studies copy was acquired as part of The Don Kelly Research Collection of Gay Literature and Culture.
Physical Description:250 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN:0679419403
9780679419402