1985, and AIDS holds San Francisco in its grip. Life is fragile. Relationships are fragile. Even the wooden stairway leading to 28 Barbary Lane is fragile. People must learn how to live fully in a time of fear, how to commit to one another, and how to protect one another.
This fifth entry in the Tales of the City series begins when Brian learns that a woman with whom he had slept is dying of AIDS related complications. Fearfully, he asks his HIV+ friend Michael Tolliver to go with him for an HIV test. After learning that it will take ten days to get the results, Brian panics and wonders how he will tell his wife, Mary Ann Singleton.
The novel then focuses on three camping adventures in the Russian River area: Dee Dee and D’orothea attend Wimminwood, an all-female music and arts festival while Dee Dee’s stepfather attends an all-male gathering of high-level politicians, CEOs, and others at Bohemian Grove. Finally, to support Brian, Michael goes with his friend to stay at a cabin.
As the reader might expect, these three worlds collide.
Maupin also introduces into the story two other characters: Thack, a gay man to whom Michael finds himself attracted, and Wren, a plus-sized model who agrees to accompany Dee Dee’s stepfather.
This fifth book in the Tales of the City series may sometimes seems to falter unless the reader considers Maupin’s dilemma: how to keep light and breezy tales of San Francisco as thousands of men die around him, straight people begin to experience the disease, and the city itself is affected by the AIDS epidemic. By the time Maupin wrote this novel, it was becoming impossible to “tip-toe” around the epidemic.
Still, Maupin reminds us that even in such dark times it is possible to commit, care, protect, and even love. In the end, even Mrs. Madrigal has chained herself to the deteriorating steps leading to Barbary Lane in hope of saving them.
Though different in tone and energy from the previous four novels in the series, this is still one to read.