Review
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Brilliantly kaleidoscopic . . . Murphy is exceptionally skilled at writing about addiction, the intertwining
of bliss and abjection... What makes this novel remarkable, though, is the way it captures the full arc of Aids in New
York . . . There have been several whopping New York novels in the last couple of years, but none of them possesses
Christodora’s generosity, its weathered and unflinching faith in what people can achieve. (Olivia Laing Guardian)
This novel is your next must-read . . . A captivating, multi-stranded New York epic about the AIDs crisis . . . An
engrossing and inspiring story of loss, love and hope, set against a backdrop of art, activism and addiction. (Observer)
This thrillingly accomplished novel... [Its] varied minds and voices are realized so convincingly that Christodora
sometimes seems the product of spirit possession. And it is joyous despite its subject matter... Murphy's skills are
most nakedly on display as he describes the addictions in which Mateo and others find solace, and their
electrical-shocking, soul-warping, mind-annihilating trips. Desperately intense, it is the kind of scene that requires
putting a book down for a moment to take a breather. (New York Times)
Hugely ambitious . . . this rich, complicated story . . . compelling . . . The richness of Murphy's account . . . the
most moving sections of the book deal not with the height of the [AIDS] crisis but with its aftermath . . . The book's
overwhelmingly powerful final sections... the last hundred [pages] have a rare narrative sweep and force. For all the
despair it documents, [it is] a book about hope (Garth Greenwell Washington Post)
An impassioned, big-hearted, and ultimately hopeful chronicle of a changing New York that authoritatively evokes the
despair and panic in the city at the height of the plague. (Hanya Yanagihara)
[Murphy] writes about addiction with undeniable fluency and power. (Sunday Times)
A moving portrait of New York in the time of AIDS, Tim Murphy's honest and inful writing gives Christodora a
particular vibrancy that causes the characters to leap, whole, into the reader's imagination. This spectacular novel is
an important addition to literature that captures New York in all its glory and despair. (Candace Bushnell)
Murphy injects fresh vim into this tale . . . [He] jumps back and forth through the decades here, creating a fractured
structure that neatly reflects the fractured lives of those caught up in the epidemic and its aftermath. And it’s the
latter, in the end, that proves Murphy’s most poignant subject. (Daily Mail)
An portrait of a bohemian family, Christodora is also a capacious historical novel that vividly recreates the
lost world of downtown Manhattan in the eighties - a nuanced portrait of an era in which artists were unwitting agents
of gentrification and the bright dawn of gay liberation was brutally interrupted by the AIDS epidemic. (Jay McInerney)
An ambitious, time-traveling novel textured with the detail and depth of a writer who spent years reporting from the
front (New York magazine)
Book Description
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A novel of great and ambition, Christodora is a bold and poignant portrait of the bohemian Manhattan of
sex, drugs, art, and activism, from the early 1980s into the near future.