Well, what a gritty, gripping and emotional installment in this series.
This definitely gave me a deep insight into how people faced the spectre of HIV and AIDS - the fear of diagnosis, the rejection by friends, family and society, the abandonment by government, the vitriol, the knowing that death would not be easy. I imagine most of this is still relevant now even though HIV is largley controlled by drugs (though I do not have direct, relevant experience).
Todd goes from new highs in his career, even being involved in the kidnap brings positive exposure. But then the lowest low with Rawlins, and the kidnap expands to include them both in it’s race to destruction.
I did have sympathy with the thoughts of the kidnap gang, you could feel their despair and the symptons described make you want to weep for the lack of support they had.
In the approx 25 years since this was set, a lot of the political comments and attidtudes of some and the greed of some are no different it seems.
There were a couple of issues that I guess may be covered in the next book, and I wanted to know how Elliott got on.