At Risk

by Alice Hoffman

Hardcover, 1988

Status

Available

Call number

F Hof

Call number

F Hof

Barcode

7344

Publication

Putnam Adult (1988), 219 pages

Description

Fiction. Literature. HTML:A New York Times bestseller from the author of The Rules of Magic: In 1980s America, a family copes with their daughter's terrifying diagnosis. In a lovely old house near the coast of Massachusetts, the Farrells go through the routines of a typical August morning. Eight-year-old Charlie, a junior biologist and dinosaur expert, tries to collect one of his insect specimens. His sister, Amanda, a talented gymnast who at eleven years old is already saving her money to try out for the Olympics, prepares for her last meet of the summer. Ivan, their absent-minded father, is involved with his work as an astronomer. Out in the garden, his wife, Polly, wonders how she can trick her children into eating more zucchini. They are a family as unique and ordinary as any other, but their world will soon be shattered when Amanda is diagnosed with the disease that has been making headlines lately: AIDS. The new and still-mysterious ailment scares them�??and their friends and neighbors as well. In an instant, everything that gave their lives meaning is ripped away, and the intimacy that once came so naturally vanishes. Too overcome with grief to turn to each other, Ivan and Polly seek solace elsewhere. Charlie is abandoned by his best friend and, for long stretches at a time, forgotten by his parents. Amanda, who holds on to her dreams so tightly, must somehow find a way to let go. Torn apart by the prospect of their loss, Polly, Ivan, and Charlie must find the courage to come back together again�??for Amanda's sake and for their own. At Risk is an exquisite book about true sorrow and even truer dev… (more)

Original publication date

1988

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User reviews

LibraryThing member bhowell
Like all of Ms Hoffman's books, this is a winner, the story of a family struggling with the terminal illness of a child. Eleven year old Amanda, contracts the AIDS virus from a blood transfusion, given five years prior. Written in 1988, at a time when AIDS was a speedy death verdict, the book also
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chronicles the intolerance and prejudice such families endured. Amanda wants to stay in school but many parents don't want her there.
The book is far superior to Jodi Picault's "My Sister's Keeper" and I highly recommend it .
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LibraryThing member sdunford
AIDS: a difficult subject but covered gently and with love, written when AIDS was a death sentence and when the fear was palpable - well written, worth reading, and thankfully already dated (at least in 1st world countries)
LibraryThing member bookmagic
Hoffman wrote this book in 1988, when AIDS was still very new and misunderstood. It is the heartbreaking story of Amanda, a budding gymnast who is diagnosed with AIDS, contracted through a blood transfusion. This depicts the struggle of the family to understand what is happening, while facing
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ostracism from members of the community. Have tissues nearby
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LibraryThing member whitewavedarling
One of the early AIDS-related novels, this work is not only powerful and important, but beautifully conceived and written. Hoffman tackles a narrative that addresses the effects of disease on an American family in a way that paints a powerful story in itself, while still bringing into account the
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particular questions and worries that arise with AIDS cases. Hoffman's work here is necessary and serious, but the humor and beauty she finds a way to include are the aspects that make this book so striking. Hoffman didn't write a novel about AIDS, as so many authors have--she wrote a surprisingly uplifting story about a young vibrant girl and her family facing the unfairness and the beauty of life. Yes, this is a serious book, and difficult to take---it is also absolutely worth your time in all respects, and has everything you could hope for in a novel.
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LibraryThing member KRaySaulis
This book has taken me MONTHS to read. It's very sad, and a little boring... Alice Hoffman is one of my favorite authors so I'm very dissapointed in how I feel about this book... For what it was the book was good, but it's not at all the genre I'm interested in, or the genre I'm accustomed to from
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Alice Hoffman... She doesn't usually make me cry...
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LibraryThing member HelenDeakin
3.5 Stars. Not quite a 4 from me but deserves more than 3. I quite enjoyed most of these short stories although a few I felt were lacking something and one I skipped altogether after the first couple pages. I did mostly enjoy it though but the stories were not what I normally get into.
LibraryThing member HelenDeakin
3.5 Stars. Not quite a 4 from me but deserves more than 3. I quite enjoyed most of these short stories although a few I felt were lacking something and one I skipped altogether after the first couple pages. I did mostly enjoy it though but the stories were not what I normally get into.
LibraryThing member Cheryl_in_CC_NV
Could've sworn I wrote a review. I remember being quite moved by this - I wish I knew why I gave it three stars instead of four...
LibraryThing member N.W.Moors
In this era of a global pandemic, I found a resonance with this book about the AIDS epidemic. In this case, the story focuses on one family and the effect of an AIDS diagnosis when their eleven-year-old daughter, a budding gymnastic star, is diagnosed with AIDS due to a blood transfusion. Mother,
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father, and brother are all deeply impacted as well as the other townsfolk and family. This is in the early days of AIDS when there was still a lot of misinformation and fear (much like today with Covid-19).
Alice Hoffman is one of my favorite authors, so I was happy to find a book of hers that I'd missed reading. The story is both poignant and infuriating as new bonds are forged and old friendships lost. As I watch my fellow American citizens try to deal with the current pandemic, I recall how poorly our government assisted in the AIDS crisis and how helpless many medical people felt in dealing with their patients, and how fear overrode common sense for many people.
This book is a small but well-written time capsule that reminds one how everything goes around, very apropos for our times.
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LibraryThing member rosies
medicine has come a long way since the 1980s; unfortunately, people haven't.

Rating

½ (151 ratings; 3.8)

Pages

219
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