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Download Borrowed Time: An AIDS Memoir, by Paul Monette

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Download Borrowed Time: An AIDS Memoir, by Paul Monette

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Borrowed Time: An AIDS Memoir, by Paul Monette

Borrowed Time: An AIDS Memoir, by Paul Monette


Borrowed Time: An AIDS Memoir, by Paul Monette


Download Borrowed Time: An AIDS Memoir, by Paul Monette

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Borrowed Time: An AIDS Memoir, by Paul Monette

From Publishers Weekly

Wrenching in its detail, this account of the author's final two years with his companion and "beloved friend" Roger Horwitz, who died of AIDS in 1986, personalizes the epidemic's appalling statistics with heartbreaking clarity. Poet and novelist Monette (Love Alone: 18 Elegies for Rog) applies admirable candor and control to the task of chronicling the suffering endured in the months between the diagnosis and death of the man with whom he had spent over 10 years. Monette brings to the narrative a poet's eye for the telling image or metaphor, and makes this far more than a simple compendium of medical disasters: the memoir transcends the particulars of the AIDS epidemic to stand as an eloquent testimonial to the power of love and the devastation of loss, the courage of the ill and the anger, fear and dedication of their loved ones. Despite its universal resonances, the book is perhaps most valuable as a vital addition to the literature of the AIDS epidemic. Affluent and exceptionally well connected in the L.A. gay elite, Horwitz was no typical AIDS patient: Monette maneuvered him into various experimental programs (he was the first AIDS patient west of the Mississippi to have access to AZT), and the firsthand glimpse of the "netherworld of the sick," negotiating the byzantine route to the next "magic bullet" offers vivid confirmation of the human cost of the government's initial policy of informed neglect. "A gay man seeks his history in mythic fragments, random as blocks of stone in the ruins covered in Greek characters, gradually being erased in the summer rain," the author writes of a trip to Greece he and Horwitz took shortly before the diagnosis. Monette's moving history is just such a fragment for future generations, a touchstone reference to a tragic time that we cannot allow to be erased. Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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From Library Journal

"Why don't you write about this? Nobody else does." These words, from one of the doctors treating Monette's lover Roger Horwitz during his well-fought but losing battle with AIDS, prompted this book. Purged of the tendency toward jeremiad he displayed in Love Alone ( LJ 4/1/88), poems written during the last months of Rog's life, Monette has fused "unresolved rage" with eloquence to produce a gripping, accessible, and essential book. Monette captures the everyday minutiae and roller coaster emotions of living with AIDS, taking us from his first personal exposure to the epidemic via an old friend, through the 19 months between Rog's diagnosis and death. Monette's solipsistic dedication to a community of prosperous, white gay men can be annoying, but the book's strength is that it is always annoyingly, believably real. BOMC alternate.Rob Schmieder, BostonCopyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Product details

Hardcover: 400 pages

Publisher: Harcourt; 1 edition (June 10, 1988)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 9780151135981

ISBN-13: 978-0151135981

ASIN: 0151135983

Product Dimensions:

6.5 x 1.5 x 9.8 inches

Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds

Average Customer Review:

4.8 out of 5 stars

78 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#357,125 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

This monumental, heartbreaking story is talented Paul Monette's gift to posterity, tenderly parting a curtain on the ghastly impacts of a tragically misunderstood epidemic. He & Roger did not die in vain. I was "complicit" in my ignorance at the time---apathetic, & well-schooled in religious homophobia. Then our wonderful son stunned us by coming out as gay, and immediately opened our eyes to that which we had been blind. He met the love of his life at age 28, just as Paul did; but there the parallel paths diverged. By the grace of God, they came of age in a different time---on the shoulders of those activists who had to die young. As a result, the two of them have the previously undreamed-of luxury of looking forward to the possibility of sharing a long life together (tho our son-in-law was exposed to HIV). I've dedicated the rest of my life to fighting for the right of same-sex couples like Paul & Roger to have the opportunity to marry---light instead of darkness; hope & love, out of depression & secrecy & indignity & disease.

I bought Borrowed Time: An AIDS Memoir by Monette because it was recommended by a class on AIDS I was taking as research for a book I'm writing. I thought the book might help me better understand the AIDS patient and even AIDS itself. Monette tells a story that is a heartbreaking mix of love, family, and loss. Not just the loss of his life partner but loss of a way of being in the world. He demonstrates eloquently the devastation fear wreaks when knowledge is minimal while showing the immense power of love to hold people together. At times, Monette's self-deprecation felt a bit too much, but it showed a glimpse into how insecurities can push us to both our best and our worst. He talked with graphic detail about the physical havoc AIDS brought not only to the bodies of those who suffer with it but to the lives and the communities where AIDS became such an accepted part of life that people talked about when instead of if. Monette talks about his and the gay community's resentment of people's ignorance and particularly their determination to remain ignorant. His love for his life partner, Roger Horwitz, is palpable throughout the book. I felt almost like an interloper in their lives in some of the more intimate portions of the book. Monette writes in a way that had me wishing for Roger to be saved even though I knew before I even began the book that was impossible. Near the end, I also found myself longing for Roger's suffering to end even though the end of that suffering meant death. Monette's description of full-blown AIDS and the suffering of not only Roger but their friends broke my heart and made me determined to support death with dignity laws. Monette downplays his own diagnosis of AIDS throughout the book. Roger is his focus because Roger is the one who is in crisis. I felt Monette's grief throughout the pages. I felt the secrecy in place to try to protect those who could offer support. I felt the love these two men shared. I felt the openness of love and compassion coupled with the anger and despair at a system not moving quickly enough to make a difference in lives. Borrowed Time is a reminder that no matter who we are, how we live our lives, or who we love, the time we have is only borrowed and it will be taken away at some point...

What is now unfortunately a long forgotten time in the genesis of AIDS, this book is a haunting tale of great pain and loss, but ultimately the love of two men struggling to survive a time in history that society wanted no part of. Paul shows us with great lyrical prose the worst that life can bring and how that can be transformed into lasting writing that matters. Their story needed to be told and the world should take note and continue forward with their movement, if only to be thankful for his courage in sharing such pain and sorrow. AIDS took everything from them (and Paul details it all brutally), but LOVE remained. While I am one to loan out my favorites to anyone that asks, this particular book will not be going anywhere. At times it was so difficult to read I couldn't fathom that he pushed through, let alone found the words to describe it so poignantly. Had he overcome AIDS, and became one of the many that lived a long time with it I believe he would have made great strides in education as well as helping those in need. I’m genuinely sad that when I eventually finish reading everything he has published, the world will be left with no more of Paul’s words. Frankly the only saving grace I felt at the end was knowing Roger & Paul are together eternally, in death finally at peace from such a cruel world they fought so hard to live in.

One of the best AIDS memoirs you're likely to find. Monette and his partner lived charmed lives of privilege until this terrible disease turned everything upside down, and forced them to face, in some small way, what being gay in America felt like for the rest of us. Beautifully written, this book is more than an AIDS memoir - it's a true love story. These men loved each other dearly, and were there for each other through the very worst. Monette made a good living churning out novelizations of movies - not exactly the sort of writing anyone aspires to. Tragedy and pain resulted in his literary triumph, and was the making of him, as a writer.

I read Monette's book first in 98 when it was published, 13 years and one country later, it was still on my mind, and I had to have a copy of my own for the house . Some books change you .this is one of those books. If you did not live through the hight if the AIDS crisis, and want an inside view, this book is what you're looking for. If you like a good love story, this book is for you. If you like a good tragedy , this is for you. The characters warm and relatable , Monette writes this book and makes you feel like a member of his family . He's a terribly interesting guy to begin with, so story aside the biographical part is worth reading , but , this is one of those hooks that left me in tears, and had me feeling as though I had been through a battle along side the author . All I can say is read it!

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