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How to Survive a Plague

The Story of How Activists and Scientists Tamed AIDS

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How to Survive a Plague

By: David France
Narrated by: Rory O'Malley
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About this listen

Winner of The Green Carnation Prize for LGBTQ literature
Winner of the Lambda Literary Award for LGBT nonfiction
Shortlisted for the Wellcome Book Prize 2017

How to Survive a Plague by David France is the riveting, powerful and profoundly moving story of the AIDS epidemic and the grass-roots movement of activists, many of them facing their own life-or-death struggles, who grabbed the reins of scientific research to help develop the drugs that turned HIV from a mostly fatal infection to a manageable disease. Around the globe, the 15.8 million people taking anti-AIDS drugs today are alive thanks to their efforts.

Not since the publication of Randy Shilts's now classic And the Band Played On in 1987 has a book sought to measure the AIDS plague in such brutally human, intimate, and soaring terms.

Weaving together the stories of dozens of individuals, this is an insider's account of a pivotal moment in our history and one that changed the way that medical science is practised worldwide.

©2017 David France (P)2017 Macmillan Digital Audio
20th Century Gay Studies History & Commentary Physical Illness & Disease United States Health care Chronic fatigue syndrome
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Critic reviews

Important and powerfully written . . . Instead of diluting the emotional force of his narrative, France’s personal perspective on the story amplifies it, particularly because his meticulously chronicled version of events is never clouded by sentimentality or petty score-settling . . . How to Survive a Plague stands on its own as a more richly nuanced telling of a chain of events that forever changed medicine . . . Inspiring, uplifting and necessary reading. (Steve Silberman author of Neurotribes)
A remarkable book about a remarkable achievement: how an unlikely alliance of US activists, patients, doctors and scientists tamed one of the greatest threats to public health in the past 100 years, saving millions of lives. (Peter Tatchell)
How to Survive a Plague is epoch-making: the whole social and scientific history of AIDS, brilliantly told. Informative, entertaining, suspenseful, moving, and personal. (Edmund White)
Heroic and heartbreaking and magnificent history throughout, How to Survive a Plague is one of the great tales of our time: the story of incredibly brave and determined men and women who defied government, the pharmaceutical industry, vicious homophobia, and the death sentence of AIDS to overwhelm an awful scourge. (Carl Bernstein)
As one generation grows up with the misconception that AIDS is nothing more than a manageable illness, another grows old with the fear that the epidemic's early days will disappear into the fog of history. How to Survive a Plague is the book for both generations. France has pulled off the seemingly impossible here, invoking the terror and confusion of those dark times while simultaneously providing a clear-eyed timeline of the epidemic's emergence and the disparate, often dissonant forces that emerged to fight it. (Dale Peck)
Riveting account of the effort by citizens and scientists alike to combat AIDS in its devastating early years. France moved to New York fresh out of college, in 1981, and he focusses on the city, where nearly half of the gay population was infected with H.I.V. before the virus was discovered. Threaded with poignant personal recollection, his history is formidable in scope and profoundly humane. It’s also a study in the power of protest and civil disobedience, bound to be useful in the days ahead (Alexandra Schwartz)

What listeners say about How to Survive a Plague

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A piece of history that needs to be shared

Finding myself listening to this felt very timely given current circumstances, but I can truly say the compassionate, brutal honesty France shares in this book should be shared with more people.
O'Malley narrates the book well, keeping pace consistent and giving every section the tone befitting its contents.
A long listen but one very worth the time. Eye-opening to a piece of history I knew very little about, if I retain even a fraction of the information in this book, my knowledge about the HIV/AIDS epidemic will be better than anything taught to me at school in recent years. Only 30 years since some of these events and so much is being forgotten.

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Fascinating and tragic

The book was fascinating, but also, unsurprisingly, depressing both in terms of what these people went through and just how relevant the treatment of these people is today.

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This is essential listening.

There were many moments throughout listening to this book that I had to stop and cry either out of anger, sadness, hope, joy or pride. David France's first hand experience and access to key figures throught his research for this book made me feel like I was living the story today whether I liked it or not.

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Worthy, exhausting

detailed but remorseless. I tried to get to the end of it but with 6 hours to go I gave up. that's six hours of my life
I wasn't. enjoying my audible experience. important history no doubt

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