
The Storm
One Voice from the AIDS Generation
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Narrated by:
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Paul Boehmer
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By:
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Christopher Zyda
About this listen
It all begins in early 1984, when Chris, a 21-year-old UCLA English literature major, risks ostracism when he comes out of the closet to his fraternity brothers just as the AIDS pandemic is beginning to explode in gay communities across the United States. Soon afterward, Chris meets and falls in love with Stephen, a graduate of Yale University and Law School, and the two of them build a life together as their friends start to fall sick and die from the spreading storm of AIDS.
Stephen begins showing symptoms of AIDS in early 1986, and Chris faces a difficult choice as he is certain that he, too, eventually will be stricken by the disease. He abandons his writing career and attends the UCLA business school so that he can earn enough money to pay for healthcare during Stephen's illness.
The Storm is filled with heart, optimism, and love, interspersed with Los Angeles history, gay and lesbian history, AIDS history, and the backdrop of the 1980s and 1990s. It is an unflinching and, at times, raw memoir of perseverance, integrity, forgiveness, the power of love, spiritual growth, Carpe Diem, dreams, and, most of all, survival and ultimate triumph.
©2020 Christopher Zyda (P)2021 HighBridge, a division of Recorded BooksListeners also enjoyed...
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Featured Article: Moving Listens About the AIDS Epidemic
The AIDS crisis is a devastating part of history that should never be forgotten. The epidemic led to the death of more than 25 million Americans and contributed to the health struggles of countless others. The audiobooks on this list confront the harsh, heartbreaking realities of the AIDS epidemic. Each of these listens helps commemorate a dark part of our nation’s history and honor those who lost their lives to the bigotry that built barriers to treatment and care.
What listeners say about The Storm
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Adam T Reidel
- 05-23-24
AIDS storytelling with a unique lens
This was terrific. Finally a love story that doesn’t completely end in tragedy and sadness. There are so many serodiscordant couples and this helps shed light on the early years of what that meant.
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- Arthur Begley
- 09-02-24
A sensitive story of personal experience losing a loved one during the AIDS era in the USA
The story is well constructed and well researched and told in a very matter of fact but personal account of living through recent times when a disease was feared, stigmatized and presented little or no hope for those infected.
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- Charles
- 08-19-24
Fantastic story
Fantastic view of one man’s experience during & after the AIDS crisis. In particular, I like how it covered how awful the back side of the hurricane can be.
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- Your Average Gay Consumer
- 06-27-21
Zyda is Brilliant (Just ask him.)
I am the same age as the author and spent the 80s/90s in Dallas during the AIDS epidemic. I thought this was going to be a warm, loving memoir that I could relate to. I was mistaken. Perhaps, I should have read the book instead of listening to it. The narrator is genuinely terrible. He projects a smug, snobbish and superior tone throughout the book. (I swear, his voice reminds me of Hermy the elf from Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer. Condescending.) There are also a lot of analogies and metaphors in this book and they are well worn. I felt I was beaten over the head with “what was red was black and what was black was red” until I wanted to stop listening completely.
It is hard to connect to this story as the author continuously points out how successful he has been at, well, everything he touches. The amount of bragging he does about his successes - and references to multiple homes, celebrity neighbors, career, salary, etc., keeps the listener from really caring. Later in the book he definitely comes across as an elitist one percenter. He also comes across as kind of petty. Who makes their parents sign a behavioral agreement after they just reconciled? There is a long section about a lawsuit with Stephen’s parents. The author was aghast that Stephen’s parents ignored his wishes but would Stephen really have wanted Chris to sue his parents or would he have said, “Chris, just leave it.”? The only outcome of that lawsuit was a sense of smug satisfaction. It did nothing to further the AIDS fight, gay rights or anyone’s honor.
My gay friends in the 80s didn’t have lawyers or high-powered careerists for boyfriends, nor were we blessed with good insurance or parents who paid for college. There were no visiting nurses or hospice staff to take care of our ill; we did it ourselves and then spent whatever free time we had volunteering at the AIDS Resource Center and Food Pantry to help others. I thought this would be a similar story that would bring back some difficult, yes, but also wonderful memories. It did not.
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2 people found this helpful