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Table of Contents

It's a Goddamn Beautiful World

AIDS Gets a Bad Rap

Holly Go Brightly

The Age of Innocence

Calling Gloria

Fire Alarm

Leather and Grace

No Thanks, Nashville

On the Rockies

One Night Only

Glowing Sapphire

Angels and Insects

Short Takes

An Apple a Day?

OBGYNC-17

Say What

S.O.S.

Blanket Judgment

Heavy Mettle



Most Talked About

Magic Johnson Accused of Faking HIV (42)

World AIDS Day: Your Feedback (22)

Guidelines Prediction: Start Treatment Earlier (blog) (19)

My First Facebook Demo (blog) (18)

Bone Marrow Transplant: Potential AIDS Cure? (9)

Obama Campaign Set to Boost Domestic HIV/AIDS Funding (8)

Most Popular Lessons

The HIV Life Cycle

Herpes Simplex Virus

Human Papilloma Virus (HPV)

Shingles

Syphilis & Neurosyphilis

Treatments for Opportunistic Infections (OIs)



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October 1996


Glowing Sapphire

by James Earl Hardy

Surviving Harlem and HIV in Push

Bristling with the lyrical intensity of a Queen Latifah track, Push, Sapphire's long-awaited debut novel, uses authentic b-girl lingo to paint a haunting, tragicomic portrait of a 16-year-old, African-American, HIV positive girl whose struggle for self-respect, self-love and self-acceptance is more complex and universal than Newt & Company would have folks believe.

Set in Harlem, Push tells the story of Claireese Precious Jones, an illiterate high-school dropout who is pregnant with her second child (both fathered by her own sexually abusive father). Without heavy-handed moralizing, Sapphire faces pejorative labels -- "welfare queen" and "unwed mother" -- head on, exposing the hollowness of tough-love campaigns, such as the tired "End Welfare as we know it!"

Sapphire's solution? Education. Under the mentoring of a lesbian teacher, Claireese sets her sights on becoming the "queen of the ABC's, not babies."

As Claireese is pulling it all together, she learns that she's contracted HIV from her father. Not surprisingly, Claireese initially views her diagnosis as the end of her life, wondering out loud why it has happened to her, "I don't deserve this!" But when she reveals her HIV status during a class discussion, she's overcome by the concern of her mentor and classmates, and their camaraderie and courage give Claireese -- and the reader -- hope.

Sapphire does right by her creation, breathing life into a character we all know of but don't know. As Claireese claims and renames herself, pushing with love and pushing on with life, you will be pushing right along with her.


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