Posted by Melody on Thursday, Feb 26, 2015
Here are four new memoirs that will make the able-bodied glad we're only trapped by crappy winter weather.
Ghost Boy by Martin Pistorius
A bizarre illness rendered Martin Pistorius immobile and incommunicado for 12 years. His family was told the teenager was going to die, but he survived in a vegetative state with no way to communicate. His family didn’t know he was cognizant for more than a decade. How do you cope when you are trapped inside your body? What do you do when the staff at the care center leave Barney reruns on for hours? This memoir shares his intense story. eBook available on Overdrive.
What It's Like to Lose Your Eyesight
Nicole Kear (Now I See You) and Rebecca Alexander (Not Fade Away) were each stricken by illnesses that threaten blindness. Alexander’s Type 3 Usher syndrome led to a loss of hearing as well. Spoiler alert: neither woman gave in to their disease; each faced their new challenges head-on. Kear approached telling her story through sassy essays of the plights and pitfalls of faking full-sightedness. Alexander’s persistence in overcoming the burdens of her illness is worthy of envy: Going blind by age 12 and deaf by 19, she sets her internal sights on accomplishing feats like 5-mile swims, weeklong bike rides, and career success, as reported in the New York Times. These books provide great stories of persevering through your limits.
Girl in the Dark by Anna Lyndsey (out March 3)
Anna Lyndsey (a pseudonym) is trapped not by her senses but by her sensations. Diagnosed with photosensitive seborrhoeic dermatitis, a condition where light makes her skin feel like it’s burning, she has rarely left her house for the past nine years and spends her waking life in the dark. She can’t even use a laptop without hurting. The question posed in the T the New York Times Style Magazine is: “If your life ends, but you’re still alive, who are you?” (Martin Pistorius has his own answers to that question.) The T Magazine does a great job of introducing the rules Lyndsey must live by and the limits she faces. Unlike Kear and Alexander, she has an even more limited palette to persevere through the obstacles, being limited to what she can do in the dark inside her house. Lyndsey’s memoir will give readers a completely new perspective on managing a woeful existence.
This book is for those of us who sadly throw their rotting CSA veggies into the compost bin. I checked this book out last year towards the end of the season and didn't get to use it enough. Not gonna happen this year. Recipes I'm excited to try include minted citrus spring peas, broccoli green and baked falafel wraps, and kohlrabi green and wild mushroom ragout over polenta. -Melody