"An energetic, fun, and kvetchy take-no-prisoners memoir of the American theater, academic ironies, and gay activist warfare. Duberman is a conflicted and talented man reaching high and low for an elusive resolution to great expectations that his prodigious accomplishments never satisfy. Hustlers, cocaine, Paul Robeson, and finally the embrace of love make this a fascinating and rollicking read." --Sarah Schulman, author of Let the Record Show
"Reaching Ninety is a wonderful account of the life of a public intellectual whose devotion to some of the most important issues of his time has been nothing less than admirable." --Vivian Gornick, author of Fierce Attachments and Taking a Long Look
"Behold: another amazing book from the remarkable Martin Duberman. Born in 1930, he takes the long view of his tumultuous life, focusing on close friends and wily enemies. Theater, psychotherapy, college classrooms, gay studies, the late 1960s: there is something here for everyone curious about our recent past." --Robert Hampel, author of Radical Teaching in Turbulent Times
"Reaching Ninety, the fifth volume of Martin Duberman's ongoing series of memoirs that began with Cures: A Gay Man's Odyssey in 1991, bring us to the present state of US and queer politics. Sometimes funny, often righteously angry, and always deeply contemplative, it is the current capstone--hopefully with more to come--to a full life of intellectual and political engagement. Duberman's five memoirs brilliantly chart more than seventy years of queer history. Collectively they are an invaluable document, and the wisdom of Reaching Ninety illuminates our world today." --Michael Bronski, author of A Queer History of the United States
"A bold, exemplary life, told with unflinching honesty and psychological insight. Our great champion of broad left coalition, prize-winning historian and playwright Duberman, advances feminism, Black power, class struggle, antiwar activism, queer scholarship, and teaching to bring about a better world." --John Howard, author of Truths Up His Sleeve and Men Like That