Showing posts with label deaf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label deaf. Show all posts

Saturday, August 24, 2019

New memoirs ...


ON BEING HUMAN by Jennifer Pastiloff is an inspiring memoir geared to adults and filled with motivational ideas from her well-liked yoga workshops. She conveys her thoughts with a very personal, upbeat tone in almost three dozen chapters with titles like “Rewrite Your Story,” “Doing and Undoing Pain,” “All Very Normal,” and “I Got You.” Pastiloff is nearly deaf but writes about the importance of listening deeply and affirming others. Her chapters do tend to jump around a bit, and the stories of her life experience will likely appeal more to her middle-aged peers, as perhaps summarized best by the Publishers Weekly review: “Readers feeling stuck in their lives will devour this inspiring story of a woman finding her way.”  Her book is subtitled “A Memoir of Waking Up, Living Real, and Listening Hard,” and Pastiloff says, “At the end of my life, when I say one final What have I done?, let my answer be, I have done love.” 

BROKEN PLACES & OUTER SPACES by Nnedi Okorafor is a shorter work, but it, too, “shows that what we think are our limitations have the potential to become our greatest strengths.” In her life story, Okorafor describes how an operation left her paralyzed from the waist down, a challenge that ultimately “ignited … passion for storytelling and the transformative power of the imagination.” BROKEN PLACES & OUTER SPACES garnered starred reviews from Booklist, Library Journal and Publishers Weekly for its award winning (Hugo, Nebula, World Fantasy) author. This new title might work quite well as a summer read for students in Creative Writing and/or Senior Writers Seminar, with an added bonus that some takes place in Chicago. Look for a copy on our shelves soon.

Sunday, March 15, 2015

I Can Hear You Whisper by Lydia Denworth


I originally started reading I Can Hear You Whisper because I thought some of our students might be interested in this book as a non-fiction reading selection.  I was fascinated by Denworth’s description of the discovery and reaction to her son’s hearing loss. A science journalist herself, Denworth interviewed numerous experts, including neuroscientists, language specialists, and educators.

This is a book about hearing, but it is also about listening, speaking and reading – with a chapter on the reading brain which stresses the value of rhyme and poetry to develop reading skills and presents research on how hearing and dyslexia may by intertwined. Denworth provides numerous references to past and current research while being very forthright in explaining the various perspectives regarding choices like sign language and use of cochlear implants. She includes scientific findings and language, but also is a talented enough writer to succinctly describe issues related to hearing in memorable, easy to understand ways:

-- “Speech production is a motor skill like kicking a ball or picking up a raisin. We don’t think of it that way …”

-- “When you speak or sing, you hear yourself in two ways: through air conduction and bone conduction.  The recorded sound of your voice sounds unnatural to you because only airborne sound is picked up by the microphone and you are used to hearing both.”

-- A startling statistic?   “95 percent of deaf and hard-of-hearing children are … born to hearing parents …”  

Says Dentworth, “I realized that my son might have a cultural identity – should he choose to embrace it – that I could come to appreciate, but I could never truly share.”  This book deserves wide readership, and will be especially valuable to families with members who are deaf or who have experienced hearing loss.

Update: 7/23/2015:  A new study shows ways to use hearing tests to predict literacy.Full academic study, "Auditory Processing in Noise" is published in PLOS Biology.

Friday, January 2, 2015

There Will Be Lies by Nick Lake



There Will be Lies by Nick Lake surprised me.  At first, I did not care for the mother-daughter characters, but I quickly came to empathize with them and did not want to see the book end. The Mom seems overbearing and stifling at the onset of the book and I kept wanting her 17 year old daughter, Shelby, to stand up for herself. The action and suspense really begins, though, when Shelby is hit by a car and begins to experience visions/dreams involving the trickster, Coyote, from Native American mythology.

Are the dreams some kind of portent? What does it all mean? Maybe the plot will seem evident to you, but I was constantly surprised at the twists and connections from Printz award winning author Nick Lake. Rather than spoil the surprises here, I strongly recommend reading There Will be Lies – a creative mix of fantasy and reality - and a page turner to enjoy.