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Mary's Books
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| "What a
remarkable woman Mary Fisher is
-- and what a remarkable,
powerful book this is. I'll Not
Go Quietly should be required
reading for every member of the
human race." |
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~ Ali
MacGraw
Actress and
Author |
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Child
of a prominent and affluent family,
successful TV producer and White House aide,
mother of two sons from her marriage to a
handsome artist – Mary Fisher seemed to lead
a charmed life. But in 1991 her world was
turned upside down by the news that her
ex-husband had AIDS, and the HIV test that
confirmed she, too, was infected. Struggling
against fear, depression and anger, Mary
went public with her diagnosis. She made it
her personal mission to educate others about
the need for compassion and activism in the
face of the AIDS epidemic. And she pursued
that mission in her historic speech at the
1992 Republican National Convention. |
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I'll Not Go Quietly, Fisher's second
collection of speeches and photographs,
presents her strategy for dealing with the
AIDS pandemic: tolerance, research, caring,
and a nonjudgmental response to AIDS and its
causes.
In the years since the landmark speech, she
has made many others, continuing to speak
out. "I'm no less a mother now than I was a
year or two ago, but I'm more a veteran of
the AIDS war," she writes in the book's
opening. "I've seen the brutal stigma, the
terror, the anger, the fear. I've tasted the
dying. Like veterans of other wars, I've
stood amid the carnage and counted the
casualties…
"It's to them, my fellow pilgrims no longer
marching with me, that I dedicate this book
(and make) a solemn promise: I'll not go
quietly." |
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by Mary
Fisher
Hardbound -
(Scribner)
288 pages - July 10, 1995
ISBN-10: 0684800748
ISBN-13: 978-0684800745 |
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Mary's Books
| Out of Print |
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