Helen Keller

Helen Keller
Title Helen Keller PDF eBook
Author Dorothy Herrmann
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Pages 422
Release 1999-12-15
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 9780226327631

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Draws on the archives of Helen Keller's estate and the unpublished memoirs of Keller's teacher, Annie Sullivan, to trace Keller's transformation from a furious girl to a world-renowned figure.

The Radical Lives of Helen Keller

The Radical Lives of Helen Keller
Title The Radical Lives of Helen Keller PDF eBook
Author Kim E. Nielsen
Publisher NYU Press
Pages 192
Release 2004
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 0814758134

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Despite her disabilities, Helen Keller worked tirelessly for human rights and other political issues.

Who Was Helen Keller?

Who Was Helen Keller?
Title Who Was Helen Keller? PDF eBook
Author Gare Thompson
Publisher Penguin
Pages 113
Release 2003-08-25
Genre Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN 0448431440

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At age two, Helen Keller became deaf and blind. She lived in a world of silence and darkness and she spent the rest of her life struggling to break through it. But with the help of teacher Annie Sullivan, Helen learned to read, write, and do many amazing things. This inspiring illustrated biography is perfect for young middle-grade readers. Black-and-white line drawings throughout, sidebars on related topics such as Louis Braille, a timeline, and a bibliography enhance readers' understanding of the subject.

Helen Keller

Helen Keller
Title Helen Keller PDF eBook
Author Helen Keller
Publisher NYU Press
Pages 334
Release 2005-06
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 0814758290

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Here is Helen Keller's endlessly fascinating life in all its variety: from intimate personal correspondence to radical political essays, from autobiography to speeches advocating the rights of disabled people.

Helen Keller in Love

Helen Keller in Love
Title Helen Keller in Love PDF eBook
Author Rosie Sultan
Publisher Penguin
Pages 261
Release 2012-04-26
Genre Fiction
ISBN 1101580615

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A captivating novel that explores the little-known romance of a beloved American icon Helen Keller has long been a towering figure in the pantheon of world heroines. Yet the enduring portrait of her in the popular imagination is The Miracle Worker, which ends when Helen is seven years old. Rosie Sultan’s debut novel imagines a part of Keller’s life she rarely spoke of or wrote about: the man she once loved. When Helen is in her thirties and Annie Sullivan is diagnosed with tuberculosis, a young man steps in as a private secretary. Peter Fagan opens a new world to Helen, and their sensual interactions—signing and lip-reading with hands and fingers—quickly set in motion a liberating, passionate, and clandestine affair. It’s not long before Helen’s secret is discovered and met with stern disapproval from her family and Annie. As pressure mounts, the lovers plot to elope, and Helen is caught between the expectations of the people who love her and her most intimate desires. Richly textured and deeply sympathetic, Sultan’s highly inventive telling of a story Keller herself would not tell is both a captivating romance and a rare glimpse into the mind and heart of an inspirational figure.

The World I Live in

The World I Live in
Title The World I Live in PDF eBook
Author Helen Keller
Publisher
Pages 234
Release 1908
Genre Deafblind people
ISBN

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Helen Keller Really Lived

Helen Keller Really Lived
Title Helen Keller Really Lived PDF eBook
Author Elisabeth Sheffield
Publisher University of Alabama Press
Pages 429
Release 2014-09-30
Genre Fiction
ISBN 1573661813

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The newest novel by Elisabeth Sheffield, the award-winning author of Gone and Fort Da What does it mean to really live? Or not? Set in eastern, upstate New York, Helen Keller Really Lived features a fortyish former barfly and grifter who must make a living in the wake of her wealthy husband’s death, and who finds work in a clinic helping women seeking reproductive assistance. The other main character is the grifter’s dead ex-husband, a Ukrainian hooker-to-healer success story, who prior to his demise was a gynecologist and after, an amateur folklorist, or ghostlorist, who collected and provided scholarly commentary on the stories of his fellow “revenants.” Their intertwined stories explore the mistakes, miscarriages, inadequacies, and defeats that may have led to their divorce, including his failure (according to her) to “fully live.” As it investigates the theme of what it means to “really live” or not, Elisabeth Sheffield’s brilliant new novel is also an exploration of virtual reality in the sense of the experience provided by literature. It is a novel awash in a multitude of voices, from the obscenity-laced, Nabokovian soliloquys of the dead Ukrainian doctor, to the trade-school / midcentury-romance-novel-constrained style of his dead mother-in-law.