Fever / Jonathan Bazzi ; translated by Alice Whitmore.

By: Bazzi, Jonathan, 1985- [author.]Contributor(s): Whitmore, Alice [translator.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Melbourne, Vic. : Scribe, 2022Copyright date: ©2022Description: 343 pages ; 21 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781922310903 (pbk.); 1922310905 (pbk.)Uniform titles: Febbre. English. Subject(s): Coming out (Sexual orientation) -- Fiction | HIV infections -- Fiction | Prejudices -- Fiction | Suburban life -- Fiction | Rozzano (Italy) -- FictionGenre/Form: Autobiographical fiction. DDC classification: 853.92 Summary: Jonathan is 31 years old, living in Milan with his boyfriend of three years and their two Devon Rex cats when, on a day like any other, he gets a fever. But unlike most, this fever doesn't go away; it's constant, low-level, and exhausting. After spending weeks Googling his symptoms and documenting his illness, he finally sees a doctor. A series of blood tests, anxious visits to hospitals, and repeated misdiagnoses ensue, until his doctor suggests an HIV test, and the truth is finally revealed- Jonathan is HIV-positive. As Jonathan comes to terms with what this diagnosis will mean for him, his future, and his relationships, he also takes the reader back in time, in search of his history, to the suburbs where he grew up, and from which he feels he has escaped- Rozzano, the ghetto of Milan, and of Italy's north. In the vein of Edouard Louis and Virginie Despentes, Fever is at once a deeply personal story and a searing examination of class, poverty, prejudice, and opportunity in modern Europe.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
wnor- Book Northam
Northam Adult fiction
F BAZ (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Withdrawn Damaged 31111084160892

Translated from the Italian.

Jonathan is 31 years old, living in Milan with his boyfriend of three years and their two Devon Rex cats when, on a day like any other, he gets a fever. But unlike most, this fever doesn't go away; it's constant, low-level, and exhausting. After spending weeks Googling his symptoms and documenting his illness, he finally sees a doctor. A series of blood tests, anxious visits to hospitals, and repeated misdiagnoses ensue, until his doctor suggests an HIV test, and the truth is finally revealed- Jonathan is HIV-positive. As Jonathan comes to terms with what this diagnosis will mean for him, his future, and his relationships, he also takes the reader back in time, in search of his history, to the suburbs where he grew up, and from which he feels he has escaped- Rozzano, the ghetto of Milan, and of Italy's north. In the vein of Edouard Louis and Virginie Despentes, Fever is at once a deeply personal story and a searing examination of class, poverty, prejudice, and opportunity in modern Europe.

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