Inspirational speeches—along with autobiographical material—given from May 1992 through June 1993 by Fisher, former White House staffer in the Ford Administration, AIDS activist, and founder of the Family AIDS Network. Fisher, who was diagnosed HIV-positive in 1991 (she contracted the disease from her husband but found out about it only after their divorce), is best known for her moving address before the 1992 Republican National Convention in Houston. That speech is included here, as are more than 20 others delivered before various groups around the US and at the International Conference on AIDS in Amsterdam. All the speeches were skillfully drafted by Jim Heynen, a P.R. consultant, who apparently also had a hand in producing the first-person narratives that introduce and give context to each speech. Because the speeches were given before such disparate audiences as high-school students, women's groups, health-care professionals, newspaper editors, Planned Parenthood supporters, Betty Ford Center alumni, religious assemblies, and community leaders, there's some variety in emphasis, but the basic message remains the same: We are all at risk for AIDS. Fisher presents herself as a prime example: If the virus can strike a woman such as herself—sheltered, privileged- -it can strike anyone. The author argues eloquently for compassion for AIDS victims and against complacency, for involvement and against prejudice. The title is taken from her nightly wish to her beloved sons, three-year-old Zachary and five-year-old Max, to whom she makes frequent reference and whose uncertain future as motherless children forms the book's poignant subtext. Individually, the pieces are touching—but repetition robs them of much of their impact.