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Push
Push
Author: Sapphire
Relentless, remorseless, and inspirational, this "horrific, hope-filled story" (Newsday) is certain to haunt a generation of readers. Precious Jones, 16 years old and pregnant by her father with her second child, meets a determined and highly radical teacher who takes her on a journey of transformation and redemption.
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ISBN-13: 9780679766759
ISBN-10: 0679766758
Publication Date: 4/29/1997
Pages: 192
Rating:
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
 279

3.7 stars, based on 279 ratings
Publisher: Vintage
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio Cassette
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed Push on + 9 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 13
Fantastic book meant for the mature reader. This is the story of an illerate girl who is molested by her father and bears two children because of it. It is told from her perspective, including through her broken grammar. The story is one of her growth and change and determination to survive. I liked it a lot because it doesn't go down the road you'd expect where it ends all perfectly with the "rags to riches" type story. This is a very different read! If you're looking for something out of the ordinary, I recommend this.
reviewed Push on + 46 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 9
Great book for anyone who likes the gritty reality of some women's lives. It's raw and disturbing but not without hope. Be prepared to be angry, shocked, sad and enlightened. Great writing.
barbelaine1 avatar reviewed Push on + 47 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 6
Shocking but riveting story of an inner city girl's abuse and education. I read this in one sitting, and months later it still haunts me.
reviewed Push on + 13 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
This is a difficult and brutal read but totally worth it and an amazing work.
reviewed Push on + 8 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
OMG I loved this book. Couldn't put it down. It's a quick read, and shows the struggles of a young illiterate woman who birthed two of her father's children on her way to making something of herself. Hidden Jem, completely worth reading.
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reviewed Push on + 18 more book reviews
Very disturbing but honest portrait of various forms of child abuse. It was initially hard to follow because it is written in the language of the illiterate main character but got better and she progressed through her literacy classes. The author really pulls you in and you can find yourself on an emotional rollercoaster regarding the abuse the characters in this book endured.
reviewed Push on + 4 more book reviews
PHENOMENAL! The book can make you sooooo angry at these fictional characters, one can get so pulled into the plot and the character of Precious. This took me only two hours to read, it was one of those books you just cannot put down.
steph-e-pooh avatar reviewed Push on + 37 more book reviews
Can't wait for the movie, very sad but a good read
terez93 avatar reviewed Push on + 323 more book reviews
Most people will be familiar with this story on account of the masterpiece motion picture "Precious," which won numerous awards, including the Audience Award and the Grand Jury Prize for best drama at the Sundance Film Festival, as well as a Special Jury Prize for supporting actress Mo'Nique. It was nominated for six Academy Awards, winning two for Best Supporting Actress for Mo'Nique and Geoffrey Fletcher for Best Adapted Screenplay, making him the first African-American to win a screenplay award at the Oscars.

Almost beyond belief, it was the acting debut for the actress who played the lead character, Gabourey Sidibe. Casting director Billy Hopkins reportedly chose her after an open-call audition at New York City's Lehman College. Gabby was chosen over 300 others.

That said, although this book was billed as "young adult" literature, I hope that's not true, in the case of teenagers, at least, because this is about as graphic and disturbing as one can imagine, and is certainly not for children. I wanted to like this more than I did, honestly, as the movie was superlative, one of the rare instances where the film is superior to the book, but it was so over-the-top that I really didn't enjoy it. I think the best description I've seen so far is "unapologetically raw." That's it in a nutshell.

This tragic novel that makes Charles Dickens's characters seem mild in comparison tells the story of Precious, an illiterate sixteen-year-old who is still in junior high school. Precious has been abused in every way a person can be abused, by her parents, including her mother who constantly beats and berates her, and her biological father who ... well, by whom she has had two children, the first at twelve. I'll leave it there, but the book doesn't: the descriptions are utterly graphic and nauseating, to the degree that I had to skip some of the passages - it's that disgusting.

I want to say that this is nothing more than the figment of someone's deranged imagination, but I know it's not. I know this happens in real life, and I want to acknowledge that.

What I did like is that Precious is not portrayed as a victim, but as a survivor, despite everything that's thrown at her, literally. She has a disabled daughter with Down Syndrome, probably the result of an incestuous relationship, she's illiterate and years behind in her schooling, but she still desires to learn, and her home life is the stuff of nightmares to a maximum security prison inmate.

She finally finds someone who believes in her, in the person of Ms. Blue Rain, a teacher at her alternative school where she's sent when she's expelled after the principal discovers she's pregnant for a second time. Precious makes tremendous strides in her education and life, getting away from her abusive mother... until the next hammer drops.

Perhaps what I liked best was the utterly accurate description of how the system consistently fails the most vulnerable in our society, the impoverished and under-educated who lack the ability to fight back. Precious falls through the cracks at almost every turn, is failed by her family and the system charged with protecting her, and is given up on by almost everyone, including her elementary school teachers.

When she sits almost catatonic in her second-grade classroom to try to avoid the cruel bullying, which she is subjected to almost incessantly, which no adult does anything about, and fail to even notice, one administrator tells her teacher to just ignore her, and "focus on the ones you CAN teach." In that regard, this story is very much a critique of the environments where so many black children are disadvantaged, and why they feel that they have no place in a society which cares nothing for them and does nothing to protect them.
reviewed Push on + 32 more book reviews
Good book.
reviewed Push on + 14 more book reviews
So glad I read the book instead of seeing the movie


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