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And the Band Played on: Politics, People, and the AIDS Epidemic - Community Reviews back

by Randy Shilts
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Ms. Margie
Ms. Margie rated it 12 years ago
In the 25 years since this book was published, I've read it three times. This is the first time I've felt anything other than outrage, and have been able to notice the writing. Certainly I felt outrage as well this time, along with horror, anger, rage, etc. It's hard not to. The AIDS epidemic, a...
donnambrownuk
donnambrownuk rated it 13 years ago
I really struggled with how to rate this book. There's no doubt it's full of a great deal of information and the steps taken to try and 'humanise' the book and tell the stories of some of the people affected are laudable. However, it also makes it difficult to decide whether to read this as a fact...
Melody Murray's Books
Melody Murray's Books rated it 16 years ago
This book brought back the early 80s in hallucinatory detail. I remember when we first heard about Gay Cancer, and how hard it was to get any decent information. I remember when the world got wobbly and my friends were dying and it seemed like nobody cared. I was quite certain that, given my penchan...
Titles are so hard to come up with...
Incredible, eye-opening, and tremendously sad.
Itinerant Librarian on Books
Itinerant Librarian on Books rated it 31 years ago
I recall from looking over my journal from back then that this book was extremely engaging. It made me angry at times. I wrote more in my journal, but I will keep it there. I did note that I enjoyed the book, which I found to be very well documented. Also it felt like reading fiction in a way I coul...
Kaethe
Kaethe rated it 37 years ago
This may be the first book I ever read about epidemiology. It opened my mind to the intersection of disease and prejudice.
Books are Food for the Soul
Books are Food for the Soul rated it 56 years ago
I was forty in 1982, married, raising a child and reading the first articles about this weird new plague as they appeared in Rolling Stone and other publiations. I remember the attempts to classify this as a strictly gay problem, the first name for it being GRID, Gay Related Immune Deficency. When...
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