The Rest of It: Hustlers, Cocaine, Depression, and Then Some, 1976-1988, by Martin Duberman, c. 2018, Duke University Press, $27.95, 242 pages
Parts of your life are missing.
Maybe you’ve forgotten, purposefully or by accident. You were overwhelmed and didn’t look, too influenced by love, anger, or adult beverages to take full notice. Sometimes, you wonder what’s missing. In the new book The Rest of It: Hustlers, Cocaine, Depression, and Then Some, 1976-1988 by Martin Duberman, one man’s gaps are filled.
Having written other books of memoirs, Martin Duberman says that people often ask him why he’s omitted roughly a decade of his life story. Once noted, he realized that “the mid-seventies to the mid-eighties… were the most painful years of my life.”
They began with his mother’s illness in late 1976, and her surgery for something that was initially said to be non-cancerous, but was finally diagnosed as malignant melanoma. Duberman had had a complicated relationship with his mother and they’d made their peace. Still, though, hers was a horrible death, and it plunged him into his work and a bout with depression.
For years, Duberman had been involved in the LGBT community as an activist, and “in the wake of my mother’s death I hadn’t jumped ship, hadn’t abandoned academia or run off to join the circus.” Still, he looked for ways to cope: He had his “circadian chart” read and he used a fair amount of cocaine and pot. He immersed himself in projects, both of the literary kind and for the gay community, and he picked up his political engagements. Duberman worried that the stress was bad for him – and he may have been right, because he had a few health scares, including a heart attack, and another bout with depression and “desperation.”
Still, he continued to write. It was a time “of a flowering of gay culture,” when many gay literary giants were publishing – and that included Duberman himself. It was a time when bath houses dotted New York City, AIDS was emerging as a crisis, and Duberman was celibate and addicted.
It was a time when he had nearly hit bottom before he found help and love.
You may be thinking that The Rest of It is on the self-contemplative side – and you’re right, though it could also be argued that many memoirs are such. No matter; what keeps you reading isn’t the biography that the author offers here.
It’s what’s behind it.
Duberman’s life was keenly interesting between 1976 and 1988, but so were current events of the time, which he carefully recounts. This book shows an emergence of gay culture on a larger scale, growing activism, and the dawn of AIDS. His voice is occasionally snarky as he takes on the medical establishment of the times, gay nightclubs and bath houses, and Reagan politics. In these ways, his deeply personal memories, mixed with what happened when, are vastly more appealing than if this book were mere memoir.
Though it may not attract casual readers under A Certain Age, this book is perfect for readers who remember these times. Also, for historians’ bookshelves, The Rest of It should not be missing.