This is a collection of essays that Monette wrote the last years of his life, while he was fighting against AIDS.
Various are the themes he discusses, each more important than the other.
There is "Puck", named from his dog. Here he describes how the simple core of walking the dog at night has somehow helped Paul and Roger during a very difficult moment in their relationship. At the same time, when Roger is gone, the dog will be the loyal companion and a sort of "family" who has to "approve" as well the lovers Monette brings in the house, first Stephen and then Winston.
It's a beautiful description of how beautiful and precious are the simple things in our life, the one we tend to take for granted.
In "My priests" Monette unleashes his rage against the catholic and religious people who condemned gays and suggested that AIDS was more than deserved for them. He doesn't let his rage blind him though, and his priests are all the good religious people he met during his life. Those who are not afraid to help nor to love, and whose faith is in their deed more than in their prayers.
There is no God, I'm sure of that. But the more they've sought me out, the more I am convinced that there are holy men and women. So I send blessings, such as they are, to all my priests who constitute the Resistance. Down with the fur and the edicts. And if they like, they're welcome to include me in their prayers. Can't hurt. None of us will free the world of intolerance alone. We need people of God, especially if He isn't here.
"3275" is heartbreaking. This is the number of the grave where Monette will be buried after his dead, near Roger and later near Stephen as well. It contains his thoughts about his grief as a two time widower and as someone who already knows death his waiting for him (this is a theme for "One way fare" as well).
It contains a beautiful quote:
“We queers of Revelation hill...died of the greed of power, because we were expendable. If you mean to visit any of us, it had better be to make you strong to fight that power. Take your languor and easy tears somewhere else. Above all, don't pretty us up. Tell yourself: None of this ever had to happen. And then go make it stop, with whatever breath you have left. Grief is a sword, or it is nothing.
In "Gert" talking about a friend who was of the previous generation of gay people, the one who never left the closet, allows him to analyze the changes in the life of gay people that his generation was able to do, coming out and fighting for their rights.
The strong belief that they will never have to be silent again and will have to fight against who says that they have to hide (it was the period who will have spawn the "Don't ask, don't tell" as well) is a common thread in "The politics of Silence" as well as in "Mustering" (where he talks about "The March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation" who took place in 1993), and "Sleeping under a Tree" where insomnia is the pretext of some reflections about time and the need to fight until our last breath for what we believe is right.
Strong is as well the theme of AIDS, where the indifference of the press and the government alike has silently allowed a lot of people to die in the most horrible way, and more often than not, if there weren't true friends near them, alone as well.
"Getting covered" is about the press. On one side there is the fact that journalists mostly ignored the drama that was AIDS, on the other there was the difficult times writer sometimes have with the reviews of their works. All being more difficult if the work is from a gay writer ( You have to understand that I spent twenty years being turned down because my work was considered "too gay". Which I came to regard as a compliment, and proof I was on the right track.)
"Mortal Things" is a reflection on our consumeristic ways, when in the end we aren't going to bring any of the things we have accumulated during our life in our grave.
I see the difference now between mere baggage and what the heart possesses. Not that the latter is any less stolen goods-the brimming of love and the joy of a comrade-requiring every bit of a pirate's brazen stealth. And no less snatched in the end by the icy clutch of Death than all the baronies and all their rummage. [...] To have greatly loved is to sail without ballast-woth neither chart nor cargo, not bound for the least of kingdoms. Nothing remains, except this being free.
The last essay is somehow a conclusion, who explain this book choices as well as his opinion about the other Gay movement that would like to keep things more discreet.
He concludes with this:
I give them fair warning I for one am taking it all personally-too personally, in fact. Keeping a file of mealiness, of pandering to creeps, of accommodation with the enemy. I don't really have the choice to ignore it, because it's happening on my watch.