Description
Book SynopsisA memoir about friendship, family, and care giving in the age of AIDS. It chronicles the author's experience serving as primary caretaker for her friend and colleague, Mike Riegle, who died from AIDS-related complications in 1992.
Trade Review“
Hospital Time is a brilliantly crafted memoir about the writer's struggle to bear witness to the death of a friend. Hoffman's story, written in short, breathtakingly compressed chapters, chronicles life at the center of the AIDS epidemic: intense, terrifying, simultaneously suffused with meaning and empty. Hoffman avoids any cliche of the noble death, instead offering us a relentless view of her own excruciating moral struggles in the face of her disintegrating family.
Hospital Time moves, not in a straight line, but like life does
—like AIDS does—unpredictably, unforgivingly: as a series of overlapping losses, each more devastating than the last.”—Stephanie Grant, author of
The Passion of Alice“Amy Hoffman details, without flinching, what it feels like to be responsible for a friend who is dying. From the middle of an experience most of us avoid at all costs and against a backdrop of far too many deaths, Hoffman constructs a sharp political memoir about the experience of lesbian and gay families in the time of AIDS. This insightful and disquieting book delivers a moving elegy on the quality of queer friendship, straight culture’s abdication on AIDS, the meaning of mourning, and the possibility of redemption.”—Urvashi Vaid,
from the forewordHospital Time is necessary, powerful, full of the detail of authentic struggle, and beautifully done. Hoffman is right out there naked in real life with all her convictions and full sense of her community. Her book is a revelation.”—Dorothy Allison
Table of ContentsForeword / Urvashi Vaid ix
Introduction: Hospital Time 3
Living with AIDs 9
Memphis Stories 54
Mike Dies and is Laid to Rest 65
The Afterlife 91
Conclusion 149