Home of There Is No You Without Me, by Melissa Fay Greene Haregewoin Teferra, The Foster Mother Melissa Fay Greene, The Author How to Help AIDS Orphans in Ethiopia and world-wide Photo Galleries of Ethiopian Orphans and Melissa's Familly Melissa's occasional blog regarding Family life, ethiopian (and otherwise) adoption, and the world-wide AIDS epidemic
<< BACK TO ALL REVIEWS, PROFILES, AND COMMENTARY
<< PREV REVIEW     |     NEXT REVIEW >>

A Publishers Weekly Best Book of 2006

2006-07-14

Starred Review

Journalist Melissa Fay Greene explores the AIDS pandemic and an unlikely woman who became a local savior — in Ethiopia with candor, insight and personal attachment in There is No Me Without You: One Woman's Odyssey to Rescue Africa's Children.

Not unlike the AIDS pandemic itself, the odyssey of Haregewoin Teferra, who took in AIDS orphans, began in small stages and grew to irrevocably transform her life from that of "a nice neighborhood lady" to a figure of fame, infamy and ultimate restoration. In telling her story, journalist Greene who had adopted two Ethiopian children before meeting Teferra, juggles political history, medical reportage and personal memoir.

While succinctly interspersing a history of Ethiopia, lucidly tracing the history of AIDS from its early manifestation as a "slim disease" in the late 1970s to its appearance as a bizarrely aggressive form of Kaposi's sarcoma in the early 1980s, and following the complex path of medication (a super highway in the West, a trail in Africa), Greene rescues Teferra from undeserved oblivion as well as rescuing her from undeserved obloquy (false accusations of child selling).

As with her previous books (Praying for Sheetrock; The Temple Bombing; Last Man Out), Greene takes a very close look at what appears to be the fringe of an important social event and illuminates the entire subject. Ethiopia is home to "the second-highest concentration of AIDS orphans in the world"; even as some of the orphans find happy endings in American homes, Greene keeps the urgency of the greater crisis before us in this moving, impassioned narrative.

—July 14, 2006

Site by Nick Spitzer