Desire Jones, abondoned by her mother and living with her uncle and his abusive wife, finds herself prgnant and infected with HIV and decides to get revenge by knowingly infecting others with the disease.
Jenna Bush presents a nonfiction account of Ana, a young Latin American mother, who shared with Bush the loss of her parents to AIDS, abuse from her grandmother and aunt, and of her own battle with AIDS.
Choreographer/dancer Bill T. Jones documents the creation of some of his pieces, while telling the story of his life as the son of migrant workers who came of age in the Woodstock era of the sixties, and of his seventeen year personal and artistic relationship with Arnie Zane with whom Jones founded his dance company.
A series of seventeen essays that explore U.S. drug and law enforcement policies and their impact on the spread of HIV and the civil rights of HIV-positive persons.
Introduces children to the basics of HIV and AIDS, providing information on the virus, its transmission, symptoms, diagnosis, dangers, and treatment options.
Jenna Bush presents a nonfiction account of Ana, a young Latin American mother, who shared with Bush the loss of her parents to AIDS, abuse from her grandmother and aunt, and of her own battle with AIDS.