I first read People in Trouble when it was published in the early '90s, in the thick of the AIDS crisis. AT the time, Schulman was revered as an artist in the LGBT community who believed that art was not enough; activism was also necessary.
Schulman's novels documented the New York lesbian scene set in the context of the AIDS crisis; gay men were the majority of people getting sick, but lesbians stepped up to the plate, as women do, and brought their considerable organizing skills, developed during decades of feminist activism, to the gay male community, who were new to it.
I just re-read People in Trouble for the first time in those 20-odd years (hard to believe that much time has gone by.) While I still have a huge respect for Schulman (especially after reading her most recent nonfiction, THE GENTRIFICATION OF THE MIND, where I learned that 20 years on, instead of scrambling in the mean streets of the Village, she now teaches literature on Staten Island in a public university, and presumably can now make ends meet, but she still has her heart firmly in activism and community service.
All that aside, looking at this somewhat dated novel, which by that very measure serves as a time capsule of the times, I did find that her straight male and female characters are cardboard straw men; she is indicting the art community whose values border on the smug and superficial as they are surrounded by the pain and tragedy of New York society disintegrating around them. Each chapter of this novel is titled with the character whose voice it contains. Kate (bisexual married woman cheating on her husband with a lesbian but she herself does not call herself a lesbian; ever met one of those?), Peter (straight, self-absorbed male artist), and Molly (Lesbian, having an affair with Kate and paying for it, immersed in the scene). This time around, after the first 30 pages, I found myself skipping the Kate and Peter chapters and just reading the Molly chapters. (And I NEVER do that!)
What can I say; time goes by,not every novel holds up. Still, as a testament to the times, People in Trouble is part of a continuum of lesbian novels Schulman has produced, just in case anyone forgets what people went though during the first ten years of the AIDS crisis.
One last note: It is worth pointing out that the AIDS activism group, "JUSTICE" referred to in the book is actually based on the real group,
"ACT UP," whose trademark uniform was black t-shirts with the slogan "ACT UP" over a pink triangle. To see hundreds of these members at a "die-in" in Washington DC, where they would march down the street together and then all lie down in the road was enough to send shivers down my spine. I also have a memory of a protest in Rockville, MD at the Health and Human Services building (they were protesting the lack of government research being done into AIDS) where dozens of police officers wearing rubber gloves (I think they were yellow, but I can't remember but it was a garish sight) sent the most chilling message to the public that PWAs (People with AIDS) were just "germs." There was quite an outcry over that. So even though the scenes in the book were short, they brought back a lot of memories.(less)