Paul Landry Monette (October 16, 1945 – February 10, 1995) was an American author, poet, and activist best known for his books about gay relationships.[1]
Monette was born in Lawrence, Massachusetts, and graduated from Phillips Academy in 1963 and Yale University in 1967. The rigid social confines of his suburban, middle-class upbringing placed Monette in a position where life in the closet seemed to be the only option. For the majority of Monette's childhood, he felt suffocated and alienated by the strict, religious atmosphere in which he was raised. Monette would later describe this life in the closet as hindering his personal development as a child, as he was forced to deny a part of his identity that was seen as sinful by everyone around him.[2] He described his youth in the closet as an ‘internal exile', an ‘imprisonment', and claimed that closeted life equates to ‘the gutting of all our passions till we are a bunch of eunuchs.'[3]
Conflicted about his sexual orientation, he moved to Boston, Massachusetts, where he taught writing and literature at Milton Academy. In 1978, he moved to West Hollywood with his romantic partner, lawyer Roger Horwitz (November 22, 1941 – October 22, 1986). He wrote and published several novels during this time period, starting with Taking Care of Mrs. Carroll in 1978, which featured a gay protagonist.[4] Monette himself later described the books he produced in this time period "glib and silly little novels."[4] His more serious work came later in his life and was largely driven by his experiences with AIDS.
Monette's most acclaimed book, Borrowed Time: An AIDS Memoir, chronicles Horwitz's fight against, and eventual death from, AIDS.[4] The memoir details the final nineteen months of Horwitz's life, beginning with the day that he was first diagnosed with AIDS. Monette describes the day as "the day we began to live on the moon," isolating himself from the reader in order to demonstrate the devastating loneliness that is felt among AIDS patients and their loved ones. It was a miserable existence for Monette, he writes: "within three months this sense of separateness would grow so acute that I really didn't want to talk to anyone anymore who wasn't touched by AIDS, body or soul."[5]
His 1992 memoir, Becoming a Man: Half a Life Story, tells of his life in the closet before coming out, culminating with his meeting Horwitz in 1974.[6]Becoming a Man won the 1992 National Book Award for Nonfiction.[7]
Monette also wrote the novelizations of the films Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979), Scarface (1983), Predator (1987), Midnight Run (1988) and Havana (1990), as well as the novels Taking Care of Mrs. Carroll (1978), Afterlife (1990) and Halfway Home (1991). He wrote Afterlife (1990) and Halfway Home (1991) which were centered around people with AIDS and their families' experiences.[4] He once said in an interview that "One person's truth, if told well, does not leave anyone out."[8] Because of this belief, he tried to tell the truth in a way that gave a voice to a community that was usually left out.[8]
While writing his novel, Afterlife, Monette met television producer Stephen Kolzak, best known as the casting director for the TV show Cheers. Monette and Kolzak were partners for two years, until Kolzak's death from AIDS in September 1990, resulting in what Monette called his “second widowhood.”[9]
Monette's final years, before his own AIDS-related death, are chronicled in the film Paul Monette: The Brink of Summer's End by Monte Bramer and Lesli Klainberg.[10] "By the end of his life, Monette had healed most of his psychic wounds, but his rage persisted."[11] He said, "go without hate, but not without rage; heal the world."[11] He had tried to use his rage to heal the world through his writing and activism. Monette died in Los Angeles, where he lived with his partner of five years, Winston Wilde.[12] Monette was survived by Wilde; his father, Paul Monette Sr.; and his brother, Robert L. Monette.[13] Horwitz and Monette are buried alongside each other at Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Hollywood Hills), Los Angeles, California
^Wilde, Winston Legacies of Love, The Haworth Press, ISBN, p174
^"Rutherford, (Gordon) Malcolm, (21 Aug. 1939–14 Dec. 1999), Obituaries Editor, Financial Times, since 1995", Who Was Who, Oxford University Press, December 1, 2007, doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.u181675
^Seidman, Steven; Meeks, Chet; Traschen, Francie (February 1999). "Beyond the Closet? The Changing Social Meaning of Homosexuality in the United States". Sexualities. 2 (1): 9–34. doi:10.1177/136346099002001002. ISSN1363-4607. S2CID145799255.
^Hill, S. E. (June 1, 1999). "(Dis)Inheriting Augustine: Constructing the Alienated Self in the Autobiographical Works of Paul Monette and Mary Daly". Literature and Theology. 13 (2): 149–165. doi:10.1093/litthe/13.2.149. ISSN0269-1205.
^Faderman, Lillian (2007). Great events from history: Gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender events, 1848-2006, p. 524. Salem Press. ISBN9781587652653