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137 of 140 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Welcome back, Mouse
Maupin's "Tales of the City" novels had an undeniable impact on my life. I was a closeted college sophomore when I checked the first three books out of the Springfield, MA library in the Fall of 1990. I had a feeling I was coming late to the "Tales" party at that point but was instantly taken with 28 Barbary lane and its inhabitants. I was so square at 19 that the thought...
Published on June 12, 2007 by Edward Aycock

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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Sweet Coda
I had so many mixed feelings when reading this book: On the one hand it was wonderful to get briefly reacquainted with these beloved characters, yet on the other hand the move to a first person narrative was a bit jarring. I understand Maupin said this was not another 'Tales...' book, yet how can it not be when the fates of all the characters are at last revealed. It's...
Published on July 9, 2007 by Brett Benner


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137 of 140 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Welcome back, Mouse, June 12, 2007
By 
Edward Aycock (New York, NY United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Michael Tolliver Lives: A Novel (Hardcover)
Maupin's "Tales of the City" novels had an undeniable impact on my life. I was a closeted college sophomore when I checked the first three books out of the Springfield, MA library in the Fall of 1990. I had a feeling I was coming late to the "Tales" party at that point but was instantly taken with 28 Barbary lane and its inhabitants. I was so square at 19 that the thought of a pot smoking landlady made me vaguely uncomfortable; I don't miss those days or my old rigid self. At the age of 22, the landmark PBS miniseries had me spending my tax refund check on a ten day vacation to San Francisco so that I could check out the city Maupin immortalized on my own. Any misgivings about a pot smoking landlady were gone.

So now, thirteen years after I read the last book in the series, I was over the moon to see "Michael Tolliver Lives." But after reading two negative critic reviews, I was worried. Could this book measure up to my memories? Yes, and then some. "Michael Tolliver Lives" is different than the previous novels in the "Tales" series; this is one man's, first person narrative, unlike the multi-character structure of the other "Tales" books. But "Michael Tolliver Lives" is as wonderful, moving and beautiful as anything Maupin's ever written (quick plug for "Maybe the Moon.") Here are the characters we know and love. Times have changed, but Mouse and Brian and Anna Madrigal, the pot smoking landlady (and some others, but that'd be ruining the surprise) are here and take no time making us love them again.

As the title implies, this is Michael's (aka Mouse) tale. Mouse is as sharp as ever and his wry observations make you realize how much you've missed him. In this book, we learn more about his family: his mother, his brother, his sister in law, and see Michael come to an even deeper understanding of the role he's played in his family's life, and outside of it. This part of the book was one that stayed with me; some of Michael's thoughts are exactly where I have been at times, and that recognition really got to me. (Another nice moment of identification for me is when Michael cites the scene in "Poltergeist" when JoBeth Williams feels her daughter's soul move through her. I thought I was the only one who appreciates that scene.) The novel also reflects the crazy times we live in, as Maupin has always done from the hedonistic 70s to the Reagan 80s to now. It's nice to know that we're all in this together. It's been indescribably wonderful to catch up with our old friends (I've grown to love the pot smoking landlady immensely and wish I'd "known" her personally) and see how they've been surviving. In these post-9/11 years, we need our friends from Barbary Lane. And here they are.

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76 of 79 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars NOT A SEQUEL BUT A GREAT REUNION, June 19, 2007
By 
Jak Klinikowski "justjak13" (El Paso, TX United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Michael Tolliver Lives: A Novel (Hardcover)
If, like me, you're a huge fan of Maupin's TALES OF THE CITY novels, you're probably hoping his latest book is the sequel you've always dreamed of. It isn't. It's much more like a twentieth reunion, allowing brief reconnections with long missed friends, but not the continuation of an old familiar story.

Yes, Michael/Mouse and Anna and Brian are still around, but times have changed and so has the plot. The exciting ironies of a youthful and madly whimsical age have been replaced by a new and more structured reality guided by middle aged commitments and expectations. If the book teaches us one thing, it's that life goes on even if it doesn't go on forever.

Michael didn't die of the plague as most might have thought he would. The AIDS-cocktail saved his life and he's still living in his beloved San Francisco. He's sold his nursery and is now a successful freelance gardener. He has a new husband, Ben, who is 21 years younger. Ben, who Michael first became aware of on a web site for younger men looking for older guys, adores mature Daddies, and Michael has learned to accept the role. Their relationship is open, but they are very much in love and extremely contented.

Michael realizes that he has two different families, the biological one he left behind in Florida many years before, and his logical one, as Anna Madrigal puts it, the one that formed at the legendary 28 Barbary Lane. His biological family has never really accepted who he is and his logical family has never failed to be there to take up the slack.

Unlike the many stories told in the TALES novels, this is primarily Michaels story, one often filled with tragedy, but still optimistic in scope. Michael has learned to appreciate life's little gifts and his existence is a happy one. He knows where his loyalties lie, and that knowledge never waivers.

MICHAEL TOLIVER LIVES may not be the sequel I hoped for, but it is still an extremely successful and entertaining novel, full of depth and great understanding. Michael has grown up and so has this wonderful world created by Maupin. I can't recommend this book highly enough.
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58 of 60 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Nostalgic Return to TALES OF THE CITY, July 4, 2007
By 
S. Hammel (Los Angeles, CA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Michael Tolliver Lives: A Novel (Hardcover)
As much as Maupin and his publisher would like to position this sequel to the TALES OF THE CITY novels as a free-standing story, it will be most appreciated by fans of the landmark series of novels set in the San Francisco of the 70's and 80's.

While the TALES series juggled characters and points-of-view, the new novel is written in first person from central character Michael's point-of-view, giving it a voice and tone much more similar to Maupin's THE NIGHT LISTENER, especially in that both central characters are clearly stand-ins for Maupin himself. This new novel, however, lacks both the clever, tongue-in-cheek plot twists of the TALES stories and the dark, ambiguous mystery of NIGHT LISTENER.

This is a sweet and touching story and fans of the series will be pleased to have this reunion with Michael Toliver, Anna Madrigal, Brian and other TALES characters. But the story itself falls flat compared to other Maupin efforts and its one nominal twist lacks resonance or impact.

One caveat -- this novel may be as unabashedly gay in point-of-view and sexuality as anything Maupin has written, so readers unfamiliar with Maupin's work who might be uncomfortable with that will be best served by steering clear of MICHAEL TOLIVER LIVES.

All in all, this is a highly readable, if slight, novel best appreciated by those of us who devoured Maupin's TALES novels.
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51 of 53 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thank goodness Maupin revisited this series, July 4, 2007
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This review is from: Michael Tolliver Lives: A Novel (Hardcover)
As a rabid fan of Maupin's writing, I have read and reread the Tales books over the years. Something about the characters and the story touches me deeply, and the descriptions of the city really bring it alive. But on every reread, I always skipped the last book, because I was so disappointed in the ending - I really felt betrayed by what the characters did, because their actions in the last book didn't seem in keeping with their personalities at all.

So thank you, thank you, thank you Mr Maupin for giving us a more nuanced view of their actions, and giving us an idea of what they are all doing with their lives, after all these years.

The whole cast is here - though Mary Ann, is, disappointingly, across the country and only marginally involved in this story (though we do get some insights into her actions all those years ago) - but Michael, Brian, Anna Madrigal, and a whole cast of new characters are here. I loved the look into Michael's new relationship, into Brian and Mary Ann's daughter's life, and I loved meeting Mrs Madrigal's new friends and seeing the way she is spreading her legacy to a new generation of San Franciscans.

This is highly recommended for fans of the series - but do read all six of the originals before reading this one - otherwise you will have the last books spoiled for you.
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62 of 66 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Good Book, July 1, 2007
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This review is from: Michael Tolliver Lives: A Novel (Hardcover)
I first read the Tales of The City series as a high schooler in the mid nineties, and have reread them every couple of years since to recapture that raucous, free spirited yet somehow more innocent time. I couldn't have been more overjoyed to hear Mr. Maupin was releasing this "update" on our Mouse. I received it Tuesday afternoon the day it was released and finished it just hours later thanks to Armistead Maupin's charming wit and profound storytelling.
I found "Michael Tolliver Lives" to be hilarious, provcative and heartwarming like the rest of the series, but there is something a little softer and sweeter about this installment, as it should be. Time reaches into literary characters just as it does the rest of us. I loved and relished every second of this book as it filled me with the warmth of a comfortable sweater found after years of being tucked away. I only wish I could have more time with these characters,old and new, I've come to love and cherish.
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56 of 60 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Maupin's most mature and moving book., June 15, 2007
This review is from: Michael Tolliver Lives: A Novel (Hardcover)
I just finished reading this latest work by the legendary Armistead Maupin, and I must say I was extremely impressed. You see, I was never a a huge fan of his Tales of the City saga. I did read all of the novels, mainly because they had been recommended to me by friends, but I found it hard to connect with the characters. Now, however, something has definitely shifted (either in my or in Maupin's writing), as I was extremely moved by this new work. It is rare that I have read something that seems to grapple with the issues of ageing, loss and family with such honesty and unflinching commitment. I know saw so much of what I have experienced in the past 20 years is now reflected in the musings and struggles of "Mouse," that I feel a real kinship with the character. He is more real to me that he has ever been. Although there are certainly moments of humor in this novel, it was the truth of Maupin's sense of loss that struck me. I highly recommend this novel which tells me so clearly that I a not alone...
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49 of 52 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A GAY HERO TO BE PROUD OF, July 5, 2007
This review is from: Michael Tolliver Lives: A Novel (Hardcover)
If anyone had a reason to give up on life and to prepare simply to die, it would have been Michael Tolliver at the end of the sixth installment of the TALES OF THE CITY series SURE OF YOU. He had acquired HIV and like all of the other gay men of the time in this same predicament, he expected not to live much past the early nineteen-nineties. Instead, with the publication of a seventh book entitled MICHAEL TOLLIVER LIVES, we find him not only alive, but still funny and vibrant at the age of fifty-five. True, his body has changed some (he's acquired a bit of a tummy) and he's not still the young adorable "Mouse" that won the Boxer Shorts Dance Contest when we first met him, but he has other things going for him like stamina, loyalty, integrity, and best of all a love of life that has allowed him to grab happiness where he finds it whether it be his love for making things grow, supporting a friend, or giving or taking from the new love of his life the things that they both need. In Michael,
Armistead Maupin has finally given us a middle-aged gay male character that we can point to and say: "See, it is posssible to grow old gracefully and maintain a gay lifestyle."

I'm still looking for a Michael and like him I choose to think that love is possible even for middle-aged gay men. It doesn't have to be someone younger like in his case; just send me someone like Michael Tolliver whether he's a little younger, my age, or older and I'll marry him in a minute. The key is that like Michael, we need to learn to love who we are. A college psycholigist once asked me how I felt about being in love with a man. I told him that didn't bother me at all that my problem was he didn't love me back. I could and should have added that falling in love with a man was the first thing I'd ever done that I knew was right!

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55 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Michael Tolliver Lives Very Well, July 3, 2007
By 
Alan Woodward (West Hollywood, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Michael Tolliver Lives: A Novel (Hardcover)
This was like suddenly meeting an old friend you hadn't seen in years. You're pleased to find hium so nappy and well-partnered, in a relationship that seems almost ideal
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46 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars He's back!, July 3, 2007
This review is from: Michael Tolliver Lives: A Novel (Hardcover)
Yeah, after all this time, Michael is back. This was a fun, quick read. It's great that Michael survived AIDS, and is a great catch-up on what has been happening in his (and his other friends) lives. This is a fun read and makes me long for more!
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46 of 51 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Yep, he lives, July 4, 2007
By 
C. Price "reader" (Studio City, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Michael Tolliver Lives: A Novel (Hardcover)
Nostalgic, a bit preachy, but I loved it and read it one setting. I'm glad Michael made alive to tell the tale. Thanks Armistead!
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Michael Tolliver Lives: A Novel
Michael Tolliver Lives: A Novel by Armistead Maupin (Hardcover - June 12, 2007)
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