Push
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Author: Sapphire (Ramona Lofton)
ISBN: 0679766758
Format: Paperback, 140pp
Pub. Date: April 1997 Publisher: Random House, Incorporated
In an electrifying novel, a black street girl, sixteen years old and pregnant, again, with her father's child, speaks. In a voice that shakes us by its language, its story, and its unflinching honesty, Precious Jones records her journey up from Harlem's lowest depths... For Precious, miraculously, hope appears and the world begins to open up when a courageous black woman - a teacher hellbent to teach - bullies, cajoles, and inspires her to learn to read, to define her own feelings and set them down in a diary: to discover the truth of her life. Day after day they go over the pages, translating the illiterate but developing language of Precious' journals. The learning process itself, as vividly revealed as the most brutal aspects of Precious' daily existence, is the heartbeat of a novel that will disturb, galvanize, and stay in the mind.
Read Reviews from Kirkus and Booklist
Review
from Kirkus :
Poet Sapphire's slim first novel draws on her experience as a performance artist and
literacy teacher: She tells her sad but sentimentally uplifting story in the voice of a
17-year-old illiterate from Harlem, and the result is more sociological (in the Ricki Lake
mold) than literary.
Clareece Precious Jones is a study in abuse. Continually raped by her father since the age of five, she's now pregnant for the second time with his baby, the first having been born with Down's syndrome when Precious was 12. Meantime, her mother is no help, calling the overweight girl a ``fat cunt bucket slut,'' beating her at will, and satisfying her own bizarre sexual needs from her daughter. Schools have also all failed her; teachers find her ``uncooperative,'' and she considers her last a ``retarded hoe.''
Finally, Precious enrolls in a Harlem alternative school where she begins the tough climb out of illiteracy. No longer dreaming impossible ideas about rappers and movie star fame, she joins six others in a basic-skills class run by Blue Rain, a self-proclaimed lesbian who isn't afraid to editorialize in class. In short order, Precious discovers the joys of the alphabet and journal-writing, the pleasures of owning books and composing poetry. Although she raises herself to a seventh-grade level by narrative's end, she also finds out she's HIV positive. All of this is transcribed in a phonetic spelling that's supposed to reflect Precious's actual abilities, but seems condescending--and woefully unauthentic--since Sapphire often loses control of the voice.
The homage to The Color Purple (``One thing I say about
Farrakhan and Alice Walker they help me like being black'')
highlights Sapphire's commercial aspirations, as well as, by contrast, her technical
inadequacies. A maudlin (at times pornographic) advertisement for the power of literacy
and the value of recovery groups.
Review from BookList :
Sapphire returns to the themes of incest and child abuse that were a part of her daring
"American Dreams" (1984) but with a starkness that is truly horrifying and
unforgettable, perhaps because of the horror. Precious Jones lives in a world worse than
the one inhabited by the character Celie in "The" "Color Purple". She,
too, is a victim of abuse.
At 16, Precious finds herself pregnant again by her father, untrained, uneducated, and unable to care for herself or her baby. She is astute enough to know that there is a better way to live but is clueless as to how to get there. Fortunately for Precious, she meets a black teacher, Ms. Blue Rain, who "pushes" her to change with encouragement and inspiration. Ms. Rain challenges Precious to learn to read and write and improve her way of life. In her literacy class, Miss Rain instructs all of her students to maintain a journal; readers experience Precious' transformation in her journal entries.
Her development and growth are astonishing in the short
period of time we share her writings. "Push" is an intense work, both
heartbreaking and frightening. The work is slated for a 150,000-copy first printing,
excerpted in the "New Yorker", and will also be published in England, France,
Germany, and other countries.