In his autobiography "Time Borrowed: AIDS memoirs" Paul Monte wants to make young generations aware of all the mistakes, sufferings and deaths their generation experienced during the fight against AIDS . New generation survival In 1988, shortly after his diagnosis with HIV, his partner and close friend Roger Horwitz died in AIDS two years later and wrote a story of his own life. The disease divides his time into his previous life and his current life, which inevitably takes his life as a tribute to his devastating power.
The AIDS crisis has altered this situation, and as with the borrowing of Tony Kushner (1956) and Paul Monte (1945 - 1995), the United States (1993) and Paul Mont (1945 - 1995) (1988) Among the works, the writing of homosexuality is becoming more depressed, but the emotions are more rich. At the same time, the critics asked homosexuals about the existence of basic homosexuality. Many homosexuals write anthology - Stephen Coulter's Gay Poetry Penguin Book (1983), Carl Morse and Joao Lakin (1989), and Edmund White's Gay Short (1991), 3 Quote One of the things that I respect most now is that there is no evidence that 'writing of homosexuals' is not just about the writing of homosexual living essentially. Accommodation: American Gay Poetry (2000), poet Timothy Liu (b)
In his autobiography "Time Borrowed: AIDS memoirs" Paul Monte wants to make young generations aware of all the mistakes, sufferings and deaths their generation experienced during the fight against AIDS . New generation survival In 1988, shortly after his diagnosis with HIV, his partner and close friend Roger Horwitz died in AIDS two years later and wrote a story of his own life. - Diary of Susanna Kaysen - I have thought about memoirs, girls, Sane and ordinary people crazy in the hospital. Susanna Kaysen opens the door to reality and true madness, a famous former patient including Ray Charles Sylvia Plath. And James Taylor was "interrupted by a girl" in her book
The interrupted girl was an early admission to the gold rush known as Memoir Craze. Autobiography had places in the American letter for a long time, but usually these books are spoken by famous or powerful people. However, after the personal political progress movement in the 1960s, the unknown citizen's life lighting became more marketable. An early example of this type, known as "memoirs", distinguishes "autobiography" from high rollers and includes Vivian Gonnick's "Fierce Attachments" (1987), William Stillon's "Darkness Visible" ( 1990), and AIDS memoirs like Paul Monet. Borrowing time (1988)