Geography Of The Heart by Fenton Johnson: Book Cover

    Geography Of The Heart by Fenton Johnson

    BUY IT NEW

    • $16.95 Online price
      $15.25 Member price
      (Save 10%)
      Limited Time Offer! Everyone receives the Member Price on books.
      See Details
    • skip to cart
    • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=9780671009830&productCode=BK&maxCount=100&threshold=3

    GET FREE SHIPPING ON ORDERS OF $25 OR MORE

    DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:

    Usually ships within 24 hours

    Delivery Time and Shipping Rates

    Eligible for gift wrap & gift message.

    BUY IT USED

    14 copies from $1.99

    See All Available

    (Paperback)

    • Pub. Date: June 1997
    • 240pp
    B&N Discover Great New Writers
      Buy it Used: 14 copies from $1.99 See All Available

      Customers who bought this also bought

       
      • Overview
      • Editorial Reviews

      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: June 1997
      • Publisher: Scribner
      • Format: Paperback, 240pp

      Synopsis

      In this poignant memoir, the author interweaves two fascinating stories: his own upbringing as the youngest of nine children of a Kentucky whiskey maker and that of his lover Larry Rose, the only child of German Jews, survivors of the Holocaust. With grace and affectionate humor, he follows their relationship from their first meeting through Larry's death. "I'm so lucky," his lover told him repeatedly, even as he was confronting HIV. "Denial, pure and simple," Johnson told himself, "until our third and final trip to Paris, where on our last night in the city we sat together in the courtyard of the Picasso Museum. There I turned to him and said 'I'm so lucky,' and it was as if the time allotted to him to teach me this lesson, the time allotted to me to learn it had been consumed, and there was nothing left but the facts of things to play out."

      Publishers Weekly

      Novelist Johnson (Scissors, Paper, Rock) watched his lover, San Francisco high-school teacher Larry Rose, die of AIDS in a Paris hospital in 1990 after an intense three-year relationship. Rose was HIV-positive but asymptomatic when they met, and while their lovemaking was haunted by fear of contagion, the author remains HIV-negative. Rose, the only child of German Jewish Holocaust survivors-his father, Leo, was imprisoned and beaten by the Nazis in Holland, escaped and hid for three years with broken vertebrae-had a very different background from that of Johnson, who grew up Catholic and the youngest of nine in an isolated Appalachian town in Kentucky. Johnson writes with crystal clarity of his gradual acceptance by his lover's emigrant parents, of coming out to his own widowed mother at 31, of Rose's gradual physical deterioration and of his working through grief toward emotional renewal. This is a remarkable memoir, touching, funny, searing, eloquent, beautifully alive. (May)

      More Reviews and Recommendations

      Customer Reviews

      • Reader Rating:
      Be the first to write a review!