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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Stephen KuusistoPublisher: Faber & Faber Imprint: Faber & Faber Edition: Main Dimensions: Width: 12.60cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 19.70cm Weight: 0.150kg ISBN: 9780571196968ISBN 10: 0571196969 Pages: 208 Publication Date: 18 March 2002 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviewsA masterful coming-out story in which the author's secret life involves not sexuality but blindness. Kuusisto, with a condition of the retinas that left him legally blind at birth, was raised by parents who denied his handicap. Consequently, he grew up disavowing his blindness and pretending to be able to see much better than he really could. He sees, he writes, through smeared and broken windowpanes, his impressions of the world at once beautiful and largely useless. A ridiculed child, at first obese and later anorexic, he developed a love for words, especially poetry. Despite his limitations, he graduated from the Iowa Writer's Workshop, was a Fulbright scholar in Finland, and taught creative writing at Hobart College for seven years. When that job ended, Kuusisto, alone, unemployed, and desperate, found himself face-to-face with the undeniable fact of his blindness, and he at last reached out for the help he'd always needed. After accepting the stigmatizing white cane of the blind that he had rejected ten years earlier, and learning to relish the safety and mobility it gave him, he moved on to Corky, a guide dog that changed his life entirely. Today, Kuusisto is director of student services for Guiding Eyes for the Blind, a training school where the blind are matched with guide dogs and trained to use them. He no longer pretends he can see what others see; at age 39, he says, he has chosen to be blind in a forceful way. Athough portions of this memoir have appeared in various literary magazines (Antioch Review, Harper's, etc.), the presentation here is seamless. An astonishing, occasionally dismaying, and sometimes heart-breaking glimpse of life on the planet of the blind. (Kirkus Reviews) This book, like no other, will make you see - truly see - what it is like to be blind. Initially alienated by the seemingly self-obsessed narrative, one is gradually drawn into a world that is powerful and remorseless in its depiction of the alien planet of the unseeing. Kussisto is not, in fact, totally blind but retinas damaged at premature birth mean that he sees as into a huge, fuzzy, abstract painting. This is his own story from childhood in which he seeks to participate in all the normal child enterprises, refusing to acknowledge his condition, though an adolescence beset by illnesses that we so automatically associate with visual body image (such as anoerexia), to maturity, struggling with notions of what women may actually look like. It is a journey of gradual acceptance of his predicament, taking up a white cane and progressing to a guide dog. But a journey, too, into self-knowledge and an understanding of that vague sea of people who surround him people who may be actively hostile, at a loss to know how to react, or trying to 'help' (a lesson, this, in how one's own attempts to assist may be received by the blind).Written in kaleidoscopic, intense prose, this is a startling and remarkable work. (Kirkus UK) Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |