Tim Barrus Blog

  1. le sac à nouveau

    I live out of one bag. One bag.

  2. Witches Live Here

    Poery Is Dangersome Shit

  3. ChopShop

    I bought my first bike from him. And then, I stayed 4 a week. He sold a lot of bikes, none of them legally. My new hog looked exactly like a hog I had looked at across town. I know what’s for sale and my ass was one of those

  4. Poetic License

    Poetic License

  5. Plotting Survival

    Any adolescent boy who has done sex work to survive can tell at least one horror story involving tricks. Some boys can tell a hundred of these stories. Being ripped off. Being assaulted. Being forced to commit acts the boy does not want to perform. Being blackmailed. Being threatened. Being…

  6. AIDS IS NOT OVER

    The Trump Regime has made it very clear to American evangelicals that it is going to end all funding to AIDS. Monies going to the Ryan White Act, a program that makes AIDS meds – antiretrovirals – accessible as these drugs can cost a hundred-thousand-dollars a year, will disappear as…

  7. THE WAR ON BOYS. TIM BARRUS, THE NEW YORK TIMES

    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/25/opinion/feminists-misogyny-patriarchy.html?comments#permid=28008188 I work with adolescent boys. Jessica Valenti is right. Boys are conflicted. Living in cultures that are themselves conflicted. This is not simply gender warfare, but it’s cultural warfare, too. Boys are both compelled and attracted. They are also threatened by a looming lack of privilege. What a self-created

  8. Genocide

    Tim Barrus: New York Times AIDS Clinics Cut-Back Today, AIDS agencies are simply afraid that their funding will be cut back, and it will, the reality remains that people with HIV in the rural South cannot access HIV meds. The structure we have is cruelly off limits to people in…

  9. 3 kept watch like angels


  10. PHANTASMAGORIC

    RE: The New York Times Literary “experts” have called my books “phantasmagoric.” I have no idea what it means. I write images that exist in shadows, whispers, explorations as to what the word “identity” really means. In America, identity is also thematic. This throws Americans off balance as they are