by James Earl Hardy Fans of Hardy's stereotype-breaking B-Boy Blues (1994) will welcome this sequel, not least because it picks up where B-Boy left off, with gentle, educated, conventional-English-speaking, upper-middle-class Mitchell and his homeboy lover Raheim, whose family doesn't know he's gay, who speaks rappish black English yet is well read and wants to be a good father to his son, Junior.
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by James Earl Hardy This continuation of the bestselling "B-Boy Blues" series takes a humorous look, through flashbacks, at Mitchell Crawford's trying teen years, telling how they made him into the man he is today, and allowing him to finally close a chapter on one part of his life so a new one can begin.
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by James Earl Hardy Mitchell Crawford's fantasy has always been to have a B-boy. For him, B-boys stand on street corners daring anyone to invade their territory, dress to thrill, move to a rhythm all their own, and, loud and boisterous, "speak to be heard, not so much to be understood."
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by James Earl Hardy
Hardy kicked off his unique, popular, and invaluable series about gay African Americans with B-Boy Blues (1994) and now presents the fourth installment, continuing the saga of Harlemite Raheim Rivers, a model who's just made it to the big time, and his true love, Mitchell Crawford, a teacher.
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by James Earl Hardy
Hardy continues his noteworthy B-Boy Blues series with this enjoyable if cursory fourth entry, again focusing on the resilient bonds of friendships, the durability of long-standing unions, and the theory and practice of monogamy.
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by James Earl Hardy, X Hassan, Michael Christopher (Illustrator), Hassan X A cross between the Unofficial Gay Manual and the SNAPS! series, Fag Gags: Reads By, For & About The Children celebrates, as its introduction states, the "crass wit, unquestionable timing, and acid tongues" of Black same-gender-loving men.
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