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What I Did Wrong

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Set in a rapidly gentrifying New York City determined to move beyond the decimation of a generation a decade earlier, What I Did Wrong is a day in the life of Tom, a forty-two-year-old English prof...
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  • 03 May 2022
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Set in a rapidly gentrifying New York City determined to move beyond the decimation of a generation a decade earlier, What I Did Wrong is a day in the life of Tom, a forty-two-year-old English professor, haunted by the death of his best friend, Zack, who died theatrically and calamitously of AIDS. Tom himself slouches gingerly and precariously into middle age questioning every certainty he had about himself as a gay man while negotiating the field of his college classes, populated as they are with guys whose cocky bravado can’t quite compensate for their own confused masculinity. Tom tries to balance his awkwardly developing friendships with them. In the process, he begins to find common ground with these proud young men and, surprisingly, a way to claim his own place in the world, and in history.

A powerfully moving—and often disarmingly funny—book about loss, character, and sexuality in the wake of AIDS, What I Did Wrong is a survivor’s tale in an age when all certainties have lost their logic and focus. It is a romance that embraces its objects from the traumas of toxic masculinity to the aftermath of catastrophic loss amidst the enduring allure of New York City in all its manic and heartbreaking grandeur.

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Price: $17.95
Pages: 240
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Imprint: New York ReLit
Publication Date: 03 May 2022
Trim Size: 8.50 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9780823299454
Format: Paperback
BISACs: FICTION / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / LGBTQ+ Studies / General, HISTORY / United States / State & Local / Middle Atlantic (DC, DE, MD, NJ, NY, PA)
REVIEWS Icon
A wry memoir of the AIDS era that is not so much elegy as ode to a hopeful and even lyric future.

Extraordinary . . . among other things one of the best books about how ordinary folks live in New York now.---Edmund White, The Village Voice

Weir’s prose has humor and grace to spare.

A lovely, wrenching, funny, erudite novel, heavy with history and loss and beauty.---David Rakoff
John Weir is a professor of English and creative writing at Queens College, CUNY. He is the author of two novels, The Irreversible Decline of Eddie Socket and What I Did Wrong, both available from New York ReLit, an imprint of Fordham University Press. Weir’s short story collection, Your Nostalgia Is Killing Me (Red Hen Press, 2022), is the winner of the 2020 AWP Grace Paley Prize for Short Fiction.

Part One: Gender Trouble | 1
Texas is the Reason | 3
Deadguy | 25
Youthanasia | 45
Songs for Swinging Lovers | 63
Where Do You See Yourself? | 79
Already Gone | 103

Part Two: Open Secrets | 123
Sick Fuck | 125
They Live by Night | 149
How To Disappear Completely | 167
Kevin Spacey Has a Secret | 193
The Destiny of Me | 211
Abgesturzt | 229