
Click here for Randy Boyd’s bio.
Click here for Randy Boyd’s bio.
Randy gives his POV on having HIV with HIV-P.O.V..
“I was a confused boy who had to hide my true self so nobody would discover I was a fag. I didn’t know it was possible to live like I’m living now, to feel good about being gay, to be open and honest, taking care of my body and my health.” — From Bridge Across the Ocean
“If you change the way you look at homosexuality, homosexuality changes.”
— from Walt Loves the Bearcat
“Dream of a nightmare of getting raped and converted to be a fag in the locker room. Or dream of us all getting along and taking care of business.” — from Walt Loves the Bearcat
“Here’s to the day when a kid can be honest with himself and the world from the moment he conceives of himself as a lover of men, and be afforded the exact same chance as every other kid to have a successful career in professional basketball, football or baseball, without one single atom wasted harassing him for being who he is.” — from Walt Loves the Bearcat
“When’s the last time you read a book, saw a movie, heard a love song, passed a billboard, saw a commercial on television, seen any image anywhere where the hot, sexy, funny, cuddly, warm, romantic, all American object of anyone’s affection was someone like me?
If you see me in the media, I’ll be the black man, but I won’t be a black man dreaming of being a spirit leader or a rocket scientist, or a black man dreaming of having one true buddy and feeling special, the kind of special that makes you feel worthy of romance and love, the kind we all dream about, as seen on TV and in the movies.
Our roles are always played by the Julia Robertses of the world, even if they don’t fit the part.” —from Walt Loves the Bearcat
“We live in an age where we are inundated with countless images from countless sources, from TV to movies to pop-up ads. A huge percentage of those images deal with love, sex and romance. Still, rare or nonexistent is the occasion where I encounter an image that reflects who I am and what I dream of. Even rarer and more nonexistent is the occasion where I encounter an image that might encourage another soul to dream of loving someone just like me.” —from Walt Loves the Bearcat
So speaks a little black boy’s heart in a black author’s fourth novel. My novel. Several months ago, I wondered: “Why would I need a digital camera? What am I gonna take pictures of?” Sometime after that, I purchased a camera, still unsure of the answer. Thankfully, the black author has found the answer. And the little black boy’s heart is smiling at the pretty pictures.