Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion

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2024 Challenge - Regular > 08 - A book by a blind or visually impaired author

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message 1: by Nadine in NY (last edited Apr 20, 2024 03:48PM) (new)

Nadine in NY Jones | 9687 comments Mod
A book by a blind or visually impaired author


I think it's finally time for me to read Blindness CORRECTION: Turns out Saramago was NOT visually impaired, so "Blindness" won't work for this category.


Listopia list is Here: A Book By a Blind or Visually Impaired Author


message 2: by Ellie (new)

Ellie (patchworkbunny) | 1756 comments I have Notes on Blindness: A Journey through the Dark on my TBR, so I guess I'll be reading that.

Found this list of visually impaired authors:
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...


message 3: by Gina (new)

Gina (ginanicoll) | 29 comments I read The Country of the Blind: A Memoir at the End of Sight this year and can highly recommend it! It's also excellent on audio.


message 4: by Dubhease (new)

Dubhease | 644 comments Not that he is everyone's cup of tea, but Jean Paul Sartre was blind in one eye and had vision problems all his life.


message 5: by Doni (new)

Doni | 699 comments Dubhease wrote: "Not that he is everyone's cup of tea, but Jean Paul Sartre was blind in one eye and had vision problems all his life."

Nice!


message 6: by Doni (new)

Doni | 699 comments I'm going to to go with The Black Book of Colors I don't know if it's written by a blind person, but it's written FOR blind people, half in English, half in Braille. It's just too good of an opportunity to pass up!


message 7: by Melissa (new)

Melissa | 59 comments Helen Keller has an autobiography


message 8: by Melinda (new)

Melinda | 5 comments When I read this intro line, I knew Academic Gothic by James Tate Hill would be right up my alley.

"Hardboiled noir meets academic satire in Academy Gothic."


message 9: by Michelle (new)

Michelle | 41 comments I've heard great things about There Plant Eyes: A Personal and Cultural History of Blindness. I'll either read that or Redsight, a queer SFF release that's supposed to be like Gideon the Ninth.


message 10: by Denise (new)

Denise | 374 comments I really like this prompt, and I'm going to wait for a bit before deciding what to read for it.


message 11: by Lucie (new)

Lucie (lucy_31) | 8 comments I think I will read The Beauty of Dusk. It says on Scribd, that the author woke up one day with blurred vision and it turned out he had a rare stroke that cut off blood circulation in his eyes and as a result, he is now blind in that eye...


message 12: by Anna (last edited Dec 02, 2023 10:17AM) (new)

Anna | 71 comments Severely nearsighted since childhood, Stephen King has worn what he describes as "Coke-bottle glasses" for most of his life. However in a 1998 interview with CBS' 60 Minutes, King revealed a much more serious threat to his eyesight than his lifelong myopia. "I do have a retinal problem. It's called macular degeneration," King told correspondent Lesley Stahl. "Blindness is the ultimate result, but right now, I'm fine. I just don't see very well."

Read More: https://www.grunge.com/260583/the-tra...


message 13: by Dubhease (new)

Dubhease | 644 comments I'm reading The Odyssey. Supposedly, Homer was blind.


message 14: by Lilith (new)

Lilith (lilithp) | 1073 comments Haben: The Deafblind Woman Who Conquered Harvard Law has been on my radar for a while. She sounds amazing, as does the book.


message 15: by Ron (new)

Ron | 2711 comments Well this might be good after all. I thought about skipping it, but then I saw the Listopia list and found these three which I own copies of already:

Paradise Lost

The Odyssey

The Iliad


message 16: by Chelsey (new)

Chelsey (chelsrae) | 4 comments A lot of these are memoirs which are not my favorite and I already have several of them slotted for next year. Googling "blind authors" or "visually impaired authors" didn't produce much, so I just started thinking about all of my favorite authors and if any of them wear glasses. I met Tessa Bailey earlier this year and she wore them, so I am going to read something of hers I haven't read yet.


Dedra ~ A Book Wanderer (abookwanderer) | 190 comments Anna wrote: "Severely nearsighted since childhood, Stephen King has worn what he describes as "Coke-bottle glasses" for most of his life. However in a 1998 interview with CBS' 60 Minutes, King revealed a much m..."

Thank you for sharing this! It opens up a lot more possibilities since I'm trying to read books already on my shelves.


message 18: by Jen W. (new)

Jen W. (piratenami) | 517 comments Jennifer L. Armentrout has been diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa, which causes loss of vision.


message 19: by Nadine in NY (new)

Nadine in NY Jones | 9687 comments Mod
Jen wrote: "Jennifer L. Armentrout has been diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa, which causes loss of vision."



oh wow, and she's prolific. Aside from the Obsidian/Lux series, which I've read, which book do you recommend from her?


message 20: by Tess (new)

Tess Carrad | 17 comments Sue Townsend became blind apparently. She of Adrian Mole fame.


message 21: by Regitze Xenia (new)

Regitze Xenia (regitzexenia) | 1 comments I’ve thought about reading The Pengrooms by Paul Castle. It is a an illustrated children’s book by an author and artist who is losing his eyesight due to a genetic disease. I follow him on Instagram, which is how I heard about his book and it seems so much fun.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6...


message 22: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca | 1 comments “Cover: The word unseen in bold letters, slowly fading as the word ends. A women's face: young, confident, focused. Her dark hair is swept to the side covering one eye. Underneath is a mask extending down her face forming two X's over her eyes which …

Unseen is an audio comic created by Chad Allen. Written by a blind person, with a blind heroine, for blind (and sighted) audiences.

Unseen is the story of Afsana, a blind assassin living in a chaotic world in which she is invisible to society. Discounting her abilities is her enemies’ gravest mistake.”

https://www.unseencomic.com/


message 23: by Nupur (new)

Nupur (nupur_ohs) | 5 comments I recommend a non-fiction work "The Art of Choosing" by Sheena Iyengar, a psychology professor who is blind.


message 24: by Erin (new)

Erin | 370 comments Jen Campbell is an author/youtuber who has talked about how her vision is becoming more impaired. I've watched her videos for years but never read anything by her, I guess now's the time


message 26: by Myesha (new)

Myesha D | 2 comments The Color Purple

Any book by Alice Walker <3333


message 27: by Becky (new)

Becky Rivensworth | 17 comments Lilith wrote: "Haben: The Deafblind Woman Who Conquered Harvard Law has been on my radar for a while. She sounds amazing, as does the book."

I read it a few years ago and can confirm it's an excellent book.


message 28: by Joanna (new)

Joanna | 170 comments If you're interested in going a little more offbeat with this one, Provincetown Seafood Cookbook reads more like a book than a cookbook, and its author lost his hearing in his youth.


message 29: by Catherine (new)

Catherine (catrad) | 2 comments Hard recommend for Kika & Me: How One Extraordinary Guide Dog Changed My World. Non fiction but very easy to read and a wonderful book featuring a fantastic guide dog.


message 30: by Laura Ruth (new)

Laura Ruth Loomis | 235 comments Ronald Linson has several SF novellas, and also co-edited a horror anthology, Little Girl Lost: Thirteen Tales of Youth Disrupted


message 31: by L Y N N (new)

L Y N N (book_music_lvr) | 4903 comments Mod
Whoo! Whoo! Richard Osman! Okay, I am NOT glad for this, but he suffers from nystagmus which greatly limits his vision! I just acquired copies of installments 2-4 of the Thursday Murder Club series: The Man Who Died Twice, The Bullet That Missed, and The Last Devil to Die. I really enjoyed The Thursday Murder Club! YAY!


message 32: by Moriarty (new)

Moriarty | 18 comments According to wikipedia Audre Lorde was legally blind. She was a black lesbian feminist and has written fiction and non-fiction.


message 33: by Beth (new)

Beth | 39 comments The humorist James Thurber was blind in one eye and later became almost entirely blind. His short memoir “My Life and Hard Times” has my favorite story of his in it, “The Night The Ghost Got In.”


message 34: by Laura (new)

Laura (piggyb73) | 36 comments Erik Weihenmayer is a blind author who wrote about his experience climbing Mount Everest.


message 35: by Cornerofmadness (new)

Cornerofmadness | 806 comments My friend Ann Chiappetta is a visually impaired author. She has poems and prose and a memoir style book about adjusting to a guide dog.


message 36: by Roberta (new)

Roberta (greentiger) | 35 comments L Y N N wrote: "Whoo! Whoo! Richard Osman! Okay, I am NOT glad for this, but he suffers from nystagmus which greatly limits his vision! I just acquired copies of installments 2-4 of the Thursday Murder Club series..."

Thanks for that!


message 37: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie | 29 comments L Y N N wrote: "Whoo! Whoo! Richard Osman! Okay, I am NOT glad for this, but he suffers from nystagmus which greatly limits his vision! I just acquired copies of installments 2-4 of the Thursday Murder Club series..."

Just finished instalment #4 for this prompt. It was wonderful.


The Pampered Librarian | 165 comments L Y N N wrote: "Whoo! Whoo! Richard Osman! Okay, I am NOT glad for this, but he suffers from nystagmus which greatly limits his vision! I just acquired copies of installments 2-4 of the Thursday Murder Club series..."

Thank you for this. I have The Thursday Murder Club on my TBR on the shelf at home and didn't realize this about the author. It will be my choice for this prompt then!


message 39: by LeahS (new)

LeahS | 491 comments I read Queen Camilla. Sue Townsend suffered sight loss as a result of diabetes, and was registered as blind in 2001. This book was first published in 2006.

The book is a sequel to The Queen and I. The Royal Family are still living in Hell Close but a looming general election brings the promise/threat of them being returned to royal life.

It's a long time since I read The Queen and I but I remember it as very funny. This book is not so light-hearted; perhaps some of the dystopia it portrays now feels a bit too prescient. The author has a great feel for dialogue and social interactions and there are some very funny lines. A sad book in lots of ways, interspersed with laughter.


message 40: by Allegra (last edited Feb 10, 2024 09:56PM) (new)

Allegra | 41 comments Joanna wrote: "If you're interested in going a little more offbeat with this one, Provincetown Seafood Cookbook reads more like a book than a cookbook, and its author lost his hearing in his youth."

This suggestion intrigues me, but did the author lose his hearing or his sight? I haven't done either prompt yet. Thanks


message 41: by Kara (new)

Kara (madhatter360) | 54 comments Sarah Rees Brennan is blind in one eye according to a post she just reblogged on Tumblr.


message 42: by Aquaria (new)

Aquaria | 53 comments The Colour Purple by Alice Walker. When Ms Walker was a child, her brother was playing with a BB gun in a foolish way and shot her. A pellet hit her eye, which might have been saved...if her parents had been able to afford a car to get her to a doctor for treatments.

V sad.


message 43: by Lisa Marie (new)

Lisa Marie Kemmerer (readingwithlisamarie) | 177 comments Charlotte Bronte suffered from shortsightedness or myopia

I will be reading Jane Eyre


message 44: by Anshita (last edited Feb 22, 2024 05:18AM) (new)

Anshita (_book_freak) | 268 comments I read in Zami: A New Spelling of My Name that Lorde was nearsighted to the point of being legally blind. The Master's Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master's House also written by Lorde was on my tbr for a long time so I'm reading it for this prompt.
A great book to read for Black History Month.


message 45: by Stephanie (new)

Stephanie Islas ♡ | 2 comments I’ll be reading Zero Days by Ruth Ware


message 46: by Robin H-R (new)

Robin H-R Holmes Richardson (acetax) | 147 comments I read:
Thunder Dog The True Story of a Blind Man, His Guide Dog, and the Triumph of Trust by Michael Hingson Thunder Dog: The True Story of a Blind Man, His Guide Dog, and the Triumph of Trust by Michael Hingson

Michael and his guide dog, Roselle, were on the 78th floor of WTC Tower 1 on Sept 11, 2001. This is the story of their escape from the building, as well as Michael's account of living with his blindness. Very inspiring!


message 47: by Joanna (new)

Joanna | 170 comments Allegra wrote: "Joanna wrote: "If you're interested in going a little more offbeat with this one, Provincetown Seafood Cookbook reads more like a book than a cookbook, and its author lost his hearing..."

Ah, my bad! He lost his hearing; I meant to post that in the thread for the other prompt.


message 48: by Julia (new)


message 49: by Jessica (new)

Jessica Palafox | 2 comments Nadine in NY wrote: "A book by a blind or visually impaired author


I think it's finally time for me to read Blindness


Listopia list is Here: A Book By a Blind or Visually Impaired Author"


I don’t believe Jose Saramago was blind or visually impaired.


message 50: by Nadine in NY (new)

Nadine in NY Jones | 9687 comments Mod
Jessica wrote: "I don’t believe Jose Saramago was blind or visually impaired...."




whoops!! I thought I had read that he was visually impaired and that was his inspiration for the novel, but I just googled again and I find nothing saying that, so I guess I had it wrong. Thank you for pointing that out!!


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