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Touching the rock: an experience of blindness
Par John M Hull. 1990
In 1983 John Hull, a lecturer at Birmingham University, was forced to accept that he was blind. This book tells…
of his exploration of the "other world" of blindness. He reveals how every human experience, eating and lovemaking, playing with children and buying drinks in the University bar, is transformed. 1990.Tom & Bear: the training of a guide dog team
Par Richard B McPhee. 1981
A day-to-day description of the training of 12 guide dogs and their masters at Guiding Eyes for the Blind in…
Yorktown Heights, New York. Useful to readers of any age who are interested in obtaining a guide dog. Grades 5-8. 1981.The world through blunted sight: an inquiry into the influence of defective vision on art and character (New aspects of art)
Par Patrick D Trevor-Roper. 1970
Discusses the effect of various visual disorders upon personality and the visual arts. Each type of eye ailment is explained…
and related to examples from the work of famous artists. 1970.The woman who changed her brain: and other inspiring stories of pioneering brain transformation
Par Barbara Arrowsmith-Young. 2012
Arrowsmith-Young was born with severe learning disabilities - she read and wrote everything backward, struggled to process concepts in language,…
continually got lost, and was physically uncoordinated. By relying on her formidable memory and iron will, she made her way to graduate school, where she chanced upon research that inspired her to invent cognitive exercises to “fix” her own brain. Interweaves her personal tale with case histories from her more than thirty years of working with both children and adults. 2012.The way I see it
Par Nicole Dryburgh. 2008
At the age of 11, Nicole Dryburgh was diagnosed with a malignant tumour on her spine. After an operation to…
remove the tumour, followed by an intensive course of radiotherapy, Nicole's life returned to normal and the doctors were pleased with her progress. Two years later, aged 13, Nicole suffered a brain hemorrhage. Desperately ill, blind and unable to move, she was given weeks to live. Against all odds, she came home. For Junior and Senior High readers. 2008.The two: a biography
Par Amy Wallace, Irving Wallace. 1978
The story of the original Siamese twins who lived 63 years, joined at the chest. Although they had two different,…
often conflicting, personalities, the brothers became successful gentlemen farmers, courted and married two pretty sisters, and fathered 21 children. 1978.The status of Canadian youth who are blind or visually impaired: a study of lifestyles, quality of life and employment
Par Deborah Gold, Alexander Shaw, Helen Simson. 2005
A comprehensive study of the lifestyles of Canadian youth, ages 15 to 30, living with vision loss. Covers social life,…
leisure and recreation, employment, and education. Discussed the dreams and goals of the participants, and whether they felt their vision loss affected their ability to reach their goals, and what other obstacles, if any, they had experienced along the way. 2005.The stolen light (Continents of exile. #6.)
Par Ved Mehta. 1989
This volume of Ved Mehta's ambitious project to document his own life story deals with the author's experiences at college,…
and his young and illuminating adulthood in California. Ved, who set out to prove himself as a blind student among the sighted, refused to acknowledge gloomy predictions for his future made by `specialists'. Ved Mehta manages at least in part, to reconcile the conflicting forces of the Indian and American, sighted and unsighted worlds. Sequel to "Sound-shadows of the new world" (DC28717). 1989. (Continents of exile ; 6)The reason I jump: the inner voice of a thirteen-year-old boy with autism
Par David Mitchell, Naoki Higashida, Ka Yoshida. 2013
Written by Naoki Higashida, a very smart, very self-aware, and very charming thirteen-year-old boy with autism, it is a one-of-a-kind…
memoir that demonstrates how an autistic mind thinks, feels, perceives, and responds in ways few of us can imagine. Parents and family members who never thought they could get inside the head of their autistic loved one at last have a way to break through to the curious, subtle, and complex life within. Using an alphabet grid to painstakingly construct words, sentences, and thoughts that he is unable to speak out loud, Naoki answers even the most delicate questions that people want to know. Bestseller. 2013. Uniform title: Jiheishō no boku ga tobihaneru riyū.The politics of blindness: from charity to parity
Par Graeme McCreath. 2011
Examines the conventional approaches to numerous problems that affect people who are blind, such as education, Braille literacy, economic inequities,…
stereotyping, job training and employment opportunities, poverty, rehabilitation and social services. c2011.The music of light: the extraordinary story of Hikari and Kenzaburo Oe
Par Lindsley Cameron. 1998
Biography of the Japanese classical music composer Hikari Oe and his devoted father, Kenzaburo Oe, winner of the Nobel Prize…
for Literature. Discusses Hikari's physical disabilities and musical gifts and his close relationship with the father who began writing to give his son a voice. c1998.The mind's eye
Par Oliver W Sacks. 2010
Neurologist uses case studies to illustrate the brain’s ability to adapt to lost senses. Discusses a concert pianist who can…
no longer read music, a writer who is unable to read print after suffering a stroke, and Sacks’s own macular melanoma and its effects on his visual perception. 2010.The magic daughter: a memoir of living with multiple personality disorder
Par Jane Phillips. 1995
A professor with multiple personalities, or what is called dissociative identity disorder, writes under a pseudonym. She says she began…
this book as a suicide note but was surprised to find the writing process theraputic albeit traumatic. She tells of the childhood horros that led to the disorder and her therapist's work in diagnosing and helping her. Some violence. 1995.The ledge between the streams (Continents of exile. #4.)
Par Ved Mehta. 1984
As a blind nine year old, the author once held a hand in each of two, very different streams: a…
symbolic experience which he has carried with him all his life. He writes of his adolescent years between 1940 and 1949 and of how he became aware of the disparate currents flowing through his own life and that of his country. Sequel to "Vedi" (DC28720). 1984. (Continents of exile ; 4)De l'autre côté du mur: récit-témoignage ((Calmann-Lévy crime).)
Par Louise Tremblay-D'Essiambre. 2001
Beau jeune, Gilles Morin avait tout pour lui. A 19 ans, alors qu'il revenait en moto, il frappe un mur…
de roc qui le laisse paraplégique. Ce livre dit sa révolte mais avant tout, Morin réussit à nous faire vivre le drame de ses proches. On pourrait s'apitoyer sur son sort, mais c'est surtout eux qui nous touchent: leur douleur et leur immense détresse de voir celui qu'ils aimaient, disparu, pour faire place à un homme en fauteuil roulant, amer et revanchard. C'est ce regard sans indulgence sur son cheminement qui fait tout l'intérêt du livre et qui peut redonner espoir à ceux qui atteignent le fond du baril. C'est ce regard qui nous fait aussi comprendre, qu'au bout du compte, son accident a fait de lui un homme meilleur. [SDM]. 2001.La revanche des nuls en orthographe
Par Anne-Marie Gaignard, Gaëlle Rolin. 2012
Anne-Marie ne sera même pas capable de balayer les couloirs d'un hôpital. Cette sentence familière à bon nombre de naufragés…
de l'orthographe, Anne-Marie Gaignard l'a entendue enfant, avant d'être diagnostiquée dyslexique et abandonnée à son sort. Elle-même persuadée d'être nulle, elle traîne sa mauvaise orthographe jusqu'à la première partie de sa vie professionnelle. Lire un livre, écrire une carte, rédiger un mail : les gestes du quotidien deviennent une épreuve et un véritable tourment. Son ras-le-bol monte jusqu'à ce qu'elle découvre tardivement qu'elle n'est pas dyslexique, mais dysorthographique. Elle n'a simplement pas assimilé la méthode d'apprentissage utilisée par ses instituteurs. Et cela se corrige!Dans La revanche des nuls en orthographe, Anne-Marie Gaignard raconte ses blessures et son expérience, celles aussi des enfants stigmatisés, des adultes méprisés, autant d'êtres en souffrance auxquels elle propose une approche iconoclaste faisant la part belle à l'empathie. Sans concessions, elle tacle une certaine catégorie d'enseignants, de médecins, de spécialistes en tout genre, avec une gouaille volontiers provoc. Aujourd'hui, son combat n'est plus seulement personnel. La dysorthographie n'est pas une maladie et les solutions existent. Les nuls en orthographe prennent la plume, et ils ont beaucoup de choses à dire. 2012.You don't have to be blind to see
Par Jim Stovall. 1996
The author, blind before the age of thirty as a result of juvenile macular degeneration, encourages others to achieve through…
their dreams. Using examples from his own life, Stovall suggests that people can succeed by changing the way they think. He recommends that once a path is decided, people should find mentors to help them along the way. c1996.You owe me dinner
Par Jim Stallard. 2010
Louis Braille, l'enfant de la nuit
Par Margaret Davidson. 1990
Voici l'histoire d'un petit garçon aveugle qui, à l'âge de douze ans, se jura de trouver le moyen de lire…
tout ce que ses yeux inutiles ne pouvaient déchiffrer. Années 3-6. 1999.Le temps derobé: chronique du SIDA
Par Paul Monette, Manuela Dumay. 1989
Paul Monette raconte ici avec beaucoup d'émotions les années de lutte tragique que son couple a vécu alors que son…
ami agonisait du SIDA, et qu'il se savait lui-même atteint de la terrible maladie. 1989. Titre uniforme: Borrowed time.