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Showing 161 - 180 of 3179 items
Tom Sullivan's adventures in darkness
By Tom Sullivan, Derek L. T Gill. 1976
A successful young man, who has been blind since birth, tells of his life as an entertainer, composer, and amateur…
athlete. Children’s version of "If you could see what I hear." Grades 5-8. 1976. Uniform title: Adventures in darknessTo race the wind: an autobiography
By Harold Krents. 1972
The way I see it
By 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 survival of Jan Little
By John Man. 1986
The harrowing experiences of a woman who endured almost lethal psychological and physical abuse during her married life, homesteading in…
the Amazon jungle. Despite being blind and deaf, and separated from civilization, she survived for three months on her own after her husband and daughter died of fever. 1986.The stolen light (Continents of exile. #6.)
By 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 recovering: intoxication and its aftermath
By Leslie Jamison. 2018
A deeply personal and seamless blend of memoir, cultural history, literary criticism, and journalistic reportage, Leslie Jamison deftly excavates the…
stories we tell about addiction and examines what we want these stories to do, and what happens when they fail us. 2018.The music of silence
By Andrea Bocelli, Stanislao Pugliese. 2000
Andrea Bocelli is one of the world's most successful male singers, selling 20 million recordings world-wide. He has become the…
popular face of classical music. Yet behind his extraordinary success lies a story of personal triumph. Andrea Bocelli was blinded at the age of twelve. Undeterred, he continued to pursue his childhood dream to sing, using Braille musical scores and lyric sheets. This is Bocelli's true story, told in his own words for the first time. He talks frankly about his blindness, the importance of his family, his stage fright, and the pressures of international stardom. 2000. Uniform title: Musica del silenzio.The ledge between the streams (Continents of exile. #4.)
By 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)The island
By Robert Russell. 1973
A heart-warming adventure by an English professor, blind since five. In love with the St. Lawrence River, he buys a…
house on Hay Island near Ontario and tells of his own and his family's efforts to make the home livable. It is a unique account which shows the blind author hearing, smelling, and feeling the St. Lawrence, pursuing fishing, boating, and handiwork in spite of his blindness. Some strong language. 1973.A simple program: a contemporary translation of the book Alcoholics Anonymous
By Bill W., J. 1996
This revision of Alcoholics Anonymous, first published in 1939, uses modern language without gender or relationship assumptions. Explains alcoholism and…
AA's twelve-step method of recovery. In AA tradition, the author remains anonymous. 1996. Uniform title: Alcoholics AnonymousYou don't have to be blind to see
By 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.Louis Braille, l'enfant de la nuit
By 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.Cécité-nécessité
By Pierre De Michelaine. 1985
Témoignage de Pierre de Michelaine. Il nous raconte dans quelles circonstances il a perdu la vue. Et surtout il nous…
parle des milieux hospitaliers, en particulier du corps médical, qu'il accuse de se faire le seul dépositaire du savoir et de vouloir dominer les patients par son autorité. 1985.On verra bien (Vivre autrement ; #2)
By Roland Roux. 1982
Un homme dans la quarantaine, devenu aveugle à la suite d'un accident de chasse, raconte comment il a réussi sa…
réintégration dans la vie familiale, sociale, professionnelle et culturelle. Orientation chrétienne. Annexes centrées sur l'aspect médical de la cécité. 1982.Il n'y a pas de drogués heureux (Collection Vécu)
By Claude Olievenstein. 1977
Touche par la misère morale que masque le recours aux drogues et par la dépendance sur laquelle il débouche, le…
Dr. Olivenstein tente, par une thérapeutique originale, de sortir les toxicomanes de leur prison. 1977.Ivy remembers
By Ivy Ainsworth. 2009
Ivy Ainsworth is a blind eighty-six year old Plymouthian woman who has lived through the war and the austerity that…
followed. This is a story of everyday life with its joys and its tragedy. 2009.Music will out: the autobiography of Norman Silcock
By Norman Silcock. 1997
Norman Silcock, born blind in 1915 in Yorkshire, studied at the School for the Blind. He taught at the Royal…
Normal College. He is known as a composer, notably of anthems, and as an organist. 1997.Dark days: recollections of two blind boys in wartime Guernsey
By Neville Tostevin. 1995
The text is an account of the feelings, thoughts and experiences of Neville and Michael during the 1930s and throughout…
the Occupation. It offers a new perspective of the life and times in Guernsey over 50 years ago. It also documents the early history of Blind Welfare in Guernsey. 1995.Blindness and beyond: a memoir
By Monique Raffray. 2004
Eyes at my feet
By Jessie Hickford. 1973
The author thought life had come to an end when she lost her sight at the age of fifty. Then…
she met Prudence, her guide dog, and life once again became full and happy. 1973.