cover image The Story of My Death: A Memoir

The Story of My Death: A Memoir

Harold Brodkey. Henry Holt & Company, $20 (0pp) ISBN 978-0-8050-4831-5

""This is how my life ended. And how my dying began."" So wrote Brodkey, a novelist (The Runaway Soul) and short-story writer, after he was diagnosed with AIDS in the spring of 1993. He died in the fall of 1995, at the age of 65. Parts of this record of those last years were published in the New Yorker while he was still alive, against the advice of his doctor, who believed that people who keep their disease secret often live longer. But Brodkey could not stand the pretense (or ""lies,"" as he calls it) of keeping silent. The result is, in effect, the last words of a skillful writer who was fully prepared to be entertained--or at least instructed--by his own death. Set in Manhattan, Venice and the northern Catskill Mountains, the memoir combines autobiography (a St. Louis childhood, earlier brushes with death, sexual abuse by his stepfather, homosexual love affairs) with reports on the progress of the disease and thoughts on subjects that range from optimism, sexual myth and the American cult of male irresponsibility to the joy of escaping into dreams and a newly discovered delight--mixed with terror over the possible danger--in kissing his wife. Accepting illness, he learns, is more difficult than accepting death. Toward the end, Brodkey writes: ""I had expected death to glimmer with meaning, but it doesn't. It's just there."" It's ""boring."" Readers of this remarkable record may be repelled or moved or fascinated, but few will be bored. (Oct.)