Reviews tagging 'Suicide'

All the Young Men by Ruth Coker Burks

14 reviews

my13s's review against another edition

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medium-paced

1.0

I was deeply disappointed and disgusted to learn that a lot of this book was sensationalized and exaggerated for the sake of the author. I also found the author to be glib and incredibly vain. There was literally a reference to how attractive she was/people found her in every chapter (not to mention shallow and mean-spirited judgments on the appearance of others). 
I picked up this book because I thought it would be about important and inspiring AIDS activism. Instead it was an irritating and tedious screed written by someone who managed to make the death of multiple AIDS patients about herself. 

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sapphic_alpaca's review against another edition

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emotional funny hopeful informative inspiring reflective sad fast-paced

5.0


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badbadwolf's review against another edition

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challenging hopeful informative inspiring reflective sad tense medium-paced

5.0


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_alias_ali's review against another edition

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emotional funny hopeful informative inspiring sad medium-paced

3.75


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bumblemee's review against another edition

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challenging emotional informative sad medium-paced

5.0

[I hope this review is readable, I'm writing it way past my bedtime, but had to write it down before I can go to sleep.]

This book will stay with me forever, I think. And with it the names and stories of many men it tells you about, as well as Ruth herself. 

I don't even know how to find the right words for this book. I'll start by saying that Ruth is a very impressive person. She just keeps going and going and going, she just does not stop, no matter the obstacles she's presented with. She's really good at reading people and finding out how to approach them - no matter if it's someone whose help she needs or people she wants to inform about safer sex practices when she knows they won't to listen if she doesn't do it right. Her resourcefulness had me stunned more than once.

As someone who wasn't alive during the events of this book, it feels like it's very good at transporting the reader to that time period. - I watched an interview with Ruth on YouTube and she said she thinks people are thankful that she's sort of a vessel for the stories of people that would've been forgotton without her. This is very true for me. I am thankful she let Kevin Carr O'Leary into her life/memories and write them down, because this was an important read for me and I think it is for others, too.

There's a lot of pain within these pages, it hurt a lot to read this book. The way Ruth and especially her guys (as she calls them) were treated was brutal. I know this was the reality then and it therefore didn't shock me, but that didn't take away any of the anger and rage it made me feel. Or any of the sadness. This book made me cry within the first 15 pages and a few times after that. - Because of the contens, of course, but also because the words that transported said contents.
The writing style feels just so appropriate, the voice is so clear. It has beautiful words, but it doesn't sugarcoat anything. Sometimes tragic things are delivered within a short sentence, somewhere among all the other sentences, which makes so much sense, because this new tragic thing was normality for Ruth, it happened all of the time. But this kind of writing does not take away any of the impact, instead adding to it in my opinion.
It isn't all sad though. There's also wholesome moments, drag shows and people with a lot of love for one another. Also, Ruth has a lot of wit and her voice can be very entertaining.

I liked how you get to know different individuals better and how all of them were treated with a lot of love. You get to know them through Ruth's eyes and can tell how special each of them was, which is why I said in the beginning of this review that some of the names will stay with me. 

All in all I would recommend this book to anyone who wants to learn something about these years of the epidemic in the USA and how it impacted the queer community. In my opinion this book is written with a lot of care. I must say though that it isn't an easy read, at least to me it really wasn't. I would recommend to read this when you're in a good headspace.

Oh, one last thing: This book centers on Ruth and her work and while it does deal with political issues, it doesn't go beyond Ruth's life and perspective. So if you want there to be a broader context and reflection on "the bigger picture", this isn't really the book for you as it stays very personal. 

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helloits_jen's review against another edition

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challenging emotional reflective sad fast-paced

5.0

This was a pick for my book club and I’m so glad it was as I never would have picked it up otherwise! As someone who was born in the late 90s, the AIDS epidemic is something that is so foreign to me that I struggle to picture what it was actually like to live through. My heart broke over and over again for these men and it’s scary to think how recent this was happening. More than anything, that’s what I took away from the book - an eye opening story of what it was actually like. I really liked the way it was written - it seemed more fast paced than some non-fiction books - and I’m glad I took this opportunity to read about Ruth’s work and how heartbreakingly sad the lives of men were at that time. 

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bnielsen214's review against another edition

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emotional inspiring reflective fast-paced

4.5


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emilyeehaw's review against another edition

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challenging emotional hopeful reflective sad

4.25

this was such a lovely book! we get to follow ruth who takes on the mantel of doing AIDS activism work in arkansas during the height of the epidemic and the moral panic and bigotry that went alongside it during the 80s. there were several moments in this book that made me go "there's just no fucking way this actually happened" somehow ruth was always able to stretch her last dollar, get the anti-gay doctor to give her one more prescription, or find exactly what she needed in the knick of time. if all of this is true, she really is a force to be reckoned with. (the fact she allegedly knew bill clinton when he was a teenager and she was just a toddler.......and then continued correspondence with him as he became president...WILD)

and beyond all of the material things she was able to provide to the gay community, she really was a strong ally in a DARK time where not enough people were acknowledging the harm that was being done, and if they did acknowledge it, it was in the same breath they were condemning gay men. she offered compassion, love, and most importantly hope when those things seemed hard to come by in hot springs, arkansas for the people fighting AIDS. i liked that as much as this was a book about her, many of the men she helped were spotlighted as well. the book was full of stories of how they helped her and cared for her just as much as she did for them. i loved the inclusion of some pictures from this time during her work (billy <3), it added so much more life to the story and helped me put faces to the names. 

the ending seemed a bit rushed to me but i also understand why the story was cut off where it was and how the authors had to wrap things up. overall, a very beautiful memoir about a deeply interesting person ! 

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louise010's review against another edition

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challenging emotional hopeful inspiring sad medium-paced

4.5


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cocostephh's review against another edition

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