![]() ![]() ![]() tending the graveyard alone."Ĭomposed of two alternating narratives - one starting in 1985, the other in 2015 - The Great Believers hops back and forth in time like memory itself. One character has been "living for the past thirty years in a deafening echo. Her marvelously absorbing novel is itself a meditation on what it means to survive to write such accounts, to carry through life the legacy of the lost. In the note, she points us toward the "direct, personal accounts" of those who were there. Getting the facts right, of course, is a must Makkai has documented her research at length in an author's note and a recent Literary Hub essay. Taking us back to the years when an AIDS diagnosis was a rapid death sentence, it chronicles the devastation of Chicago's gay community. How do you write about a historical chapter that many living people still remember with the searing power of loss? Part-time Vermonter Rebecca Makkai faced that challenge with her third novel, The Great Believers. ![]() The Great Believers by Rebecca Makkai, Viking, 432 pages. ![]()
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