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Unbound: A Book of AIDS

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Witnessing the illness and death of many of his friends from AIDS, San Francisco poet Aaron Shurin began a series of writings that, as he puts it, "are the stations of an enlarging the question, alarmed, of a cell aroused by invasion, or the yearning curl of a lover's body awake on the vacated sheets."

The startlingly original and provocative book that resulted was not a project but a process of learning about AIDS and its implications through the activity of writing itself. It is, in that context, not a book about AIDS but, growing from Shurin's attempt to understand and reach out to those around him, a book of AIDS.

Hardcover

First published January 1, 1997

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About the author

Aaron Shurin

27 books11 followers
AARON SHURIN is the author of fifteen books and chapbooks, including the poetry collections Involuntary Lyrics (Omnidawn, 2005), The Paradise of Forms (Talisman House, 1999), a Publishers Weekly Best Book and, the prose collection, Unbound: A Book of AIDS (Sun & Moon, 1997). His work has appeared in over twenty national and international anthologies, most recently Nuova Poesia Americana Contemporana (Italy: Oscar Mondadori, 2006). Shurin's honors include fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the California Arts Council, the San Francisco Arts Commision, and the Gerbode Foundation. He is Associate Professor and Director of the MFA in Writing Program at the University of San Francisco. "

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Sarah Schulman.
243 reviews465 followers
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July 18, 2022
“The famous San Francisco sun has turned to famous rain.” Only when I began to read Unbound did I realize how much it was missing. Aaron Shurin brings his massive command of language, and the history of gay poetics,to this frontline eyewitness account of The specificity of AIDS in San Francisco. The work is frank and authentic, emotionally intentional, and it brings us back to the endless shock of coping with the impossible. We need this work to expand our understanding: of both relevant futures and ungraspable pasts.
Profile Image for Julene.
Author 14 books65 followers
January 17, 2009
In the preface of the book the sentence that speaks to me is: "The range of information AIDS presents keeps one at full attention." I have worked in HIV since 1991 and my attention has been riveted by the range of information that keeps changing and shifting. AIDS is changing science, culture, and the landscape of politics and economics worldwide. It shapes our deep grief and our future realities. The ramifications from this epidemic is unfathomable. We have lost so much and gained so much. Aaron Shurin with his exquisite language and poetry writes from his experience in the early 90s where he lived in San Francisco, and many friends died. It is a small book and one I will sit with again. In his elevated language and his heightened cultural sense he deeply examines and articulates what is nearly impossible. It is a meditation to return to. It is unfortunately out of print but available.
Profile Image for John Treat.
Author 16 books43 followers
March 12, 2015
This very short book is obviously by a very good poet. I read it in a single sitting, mesmerized by Shurin's language and his depth of understanding of grief. It's a bit "San Francisco" for my taste, by which I mean a wee bit precious, but it still stands as one of the best literary works on AIDS that I have read, and I've read a lot. I thought of many people when I read it. Kudos.
Profile Image for Gabe Etaat.
1 review2 followers
March 5, 2024
Highly recommended for those who want emotional, raw, and diverse perspectives of individual stories from the peak of the AIDS epidemic. The variety of literary styles are tied by the common thread of open expression while facing ones’s mortality.
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