Title search results
Showing 101 - 120 of 6629 items
Helen Keller (Let's read biography)
By Houghton Mifflin Company Staff. 1997
Running with Roselle: how a blind boy and a puppy grew up, became best friends, and together survived one of America's darkest days
By Michael Hingson, Jeanette Hanscome. 2013
Hingson, blind since birth, describes Roselle's energetic days as a puppy to becoming a confident guide dog. The author recounts…
how their special bond helped them survive the terrorist attacks on September, 11, 2001. For grades 6-9. 2013Long before inclusion became a professional responsibility, it was a personal struggle for Bill Henderson, a blind man and one…
of Boston's most successful elementary school principals. Yet he also argues in this thoughtful volume that his physical disability has strengthened him professionally, making him more collaborative, more creative, better able to understand the needs of all his studentsThe world at my finger tips
By Karsten Ohnstad. 1942
Seeing lessons: 14 life secrets I've learned along the way
By Tom Sullivan. 2003
Motivational speaker and author of If You Could See What I Hear (DB 35991) offers advice on living with purpose,…
passion, and fulfillment. Sullivan, blind since birth, interweaves personal experiences with reflections on lessons learned, including turning disadvantages into advantages, facing fears, and creating a life plan. 2003Adventures in darkness: the summer of an eleven-year-old blind boy
By Tom Sullivan. 2006
Memoir of actor, singer, and entertainer Tom Sullivan, who has been blind since birth. Sullivan describes the summer before his…
twelfth birthday when he experienced life through sports and adventure. For junior and senior high and older readers. 2006In the underbelly of Florida, hardened poachers operate in the dark, out of sight and away from residents who sleep…
soundly through the night. But poachers are not the only midnight hunters. In the state's public wilderness tracts, cattle ranches, and water courses, wildlife thieves are stealthily and silently trackedMidnight assassin: a murder in America's heartland
By Thomas Wolf, Patricia L. Bryan. 2005
In December 1900, a prosperous Iowa farmer was murdered in his bed--killed by two blows of an ax to his…
head. Four days later, the victim's wife, Margaret Hossack, was arrested and charged with the crime. The community was split by the trial which was covered by young journalist Susan Glaspell, later an acclaimed writer. Co-author is Thomas Wolf. Unrated. 2005A death in White Bear Lake: the true chronicle of an all-American town
By Barry Siegel. 1990
A mother's search for the son she gave up uncovers terrifying secrets in a Minnesota town in this "masterfully depicted…
true-crime tale" (Publishers Weekly). In 1962, Jerry Sherwood gave up her newborn son, Dennis, for adoption. Twenty years later, she set out to find him, only to discover he had died before his fourth birthday. The immediate cause was peritonitis, but the coroner had never decided the mode of death, writing "deferred" rather than indicate accident, natural causes, or homicide. This he did even though the autopsy photos showed Dennis covered from head to toe in ugly bruises, his clenched fists and twisted facial expression suggesting he had died writhing in pain. Harold and Lois Jurgens, a middle-class, churchgoing couple in picturesque White Bear Lake, Minnesota, had adopted Dennis and five other foster children. To all appearances, they were a normal midwestern family, but Jerry suspected that something sinister had happened in the Jurgens household. She demanded to know the truth about her son's death. Why did authorities dismiss evidence that marked Dennis as an endangered child? Could Lois Jurgens's brother, a local police lieutenant, have interfered in the investigation? And most disturbing of all, why had so many people who'd witnessed Lois's brutal treatment of her children stay silent for so long? Determined to find answers, local detectives and prosecutors rebuilt the case brick by brick, finally exposing the shocking truth behind a nightmare in suburbia. A finalist for the Edgar Award, A Death in White Bear Lake is "a distinguished entry in the annals of crime documentary," and a vivid portrait of the all-American town that harbored a sadistic killer (The Washington Post).Tales from the bed: on living, dying, and having it all : [a memoir
By Jenifer Estess, Valerie Estess. 2004
Jenifer Estess was 35 and on top of the world when she was diagnosed with ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease). She…
spent six years fighting the disease, and with her sisters founded Project ALS. Co-author is Valerie Estess. Introduction by Katie Couric. 2004The unwinding of the miracle: a memoir of life, death, and everything that comes after
By Julie Yip-Williams. 2019
Born blind in Vietnam, the author--who fled the political upheaval with her family, gained partial sight from an American surgeon,…
became a Harvard-educated lawyer, married, and started a family--turned to writing her memoir after being diagnosed with terminal metastatic colon cancer at thirty-seven. Some strong language. 2019Haben: the deafblind woman who conquered Harvard Law
By Haben Girma. 2019
The autobiography of the first deaf-blind graduate of Harvard Law School. Girma describes her childhood, world travels, development of a…
text-to-braille communication system, and time at Harvard Law, as well as the ways she uses her talents to advocate for those with disabilities. 2019My heart is not blind: on blindness and perception
By Michael Nye. 2019
Profiles of forty-five people who are blind or have low vision, including Larry Johnson, a longtime DJ in Mexico, and…
Michael Hingson, a 9/11 survivor who wrote about his lifesaving guide dog in Thunder Dog (DB 73300). Natalie Watkins, who has retinitis pigmentosa, is profiled twice, six years apart. 2019The way of the wiseguy: the FBI's most famous undercover agent cracks the mob mind
By Joseph D. Pistone. 2004
Donnie Brasco was the name assumed by FBI agent Joseph Pistone in order to infiltrate the mafia. He describes what…
the gangsters he worked with were really like -- a depiction very different from that seen in movies and on television. Strong language. 2004Blindsided: lifting a life above illness : a reluctant memoir
By Richard M. Cohen. 2004
Emmy Award-winning television news producer and journalist chronicles his battle with multiple sclerosis and colon cancer. While detailing his vision…
loss and other symptoms, Cohen's frank account is "not about suffering" but about "surviving and flourishing, rising above fear and self-doubt" with the support of his wife and children. Bestseller. 2004Be with (New Directions Paperbook #1408)
By Forrest Gander. 2018
Collection of eighteen poems exploring the themes of loss, grief, regret, and intimacy. In "Ruth," the author reflects on communicating…
with and caring for his mother as her Alzheimer's disease symptoms worsen. Strong language. 2018In 2003, the city of Tacoma was shocked by a murder-suicide.The murder victim was Crystal Brame and the man who…
committed suicide was David Brame, Tacoma's chief of police. As people started looking into David Brame's past they could only wonder how he got the job. Descriptions of sex. Strong language. ViolenceNouns & verbs: new and selected poems (G - Reference,information And Interdisciplinary Subjects Ser.)
By Campbell McGrath. 2019
Collection of more than one hundred poems--some previously published--that explore American spiritual and material hungers. "Reading Emily Dickinson at Jiffy…
Lube" is a musing on the work and impact of Emily Dickinson and the author himself, geography, Smirnoff Ice, and Bruce Springsteen. Strong language. 2019Will my cat eat my eyeballs?: big questions from tiny mortals about death
By Caitlin Doughty. 2019
Mortician and author of Smoke Gets in Your Eyes (BR 20548) answers questions she has frequently received from children. Topics…
include the title question, the disposition of an astronaut's body, keeping parents' skulls, and the decomposition process. 2019Places I've taken my body: essays
By Molly McCully Brown. 2020
Seventeen essays on traveling throughout life and the United States and Europe as someone with cerebral palsy. In "Muscle Memory,"…
she recounts growing up in a body changed by both natural development and medical interventions. Strong language and some descriptions of sex. 2020