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Rating: Summary: Moving memoir Review: Heard the taped version of TOUCHING THE ROCK by John Hull, a moving memoir of a university lecturer who slowly lost his vision over a period of several years . . . he recorded his thoughts in a diary, and I must admit to being touched about how both he and his family dealt with his condition . . . even typing this brings teary thoughts to mind . . . imagine having seen a child as a youngster, then not being able to see her again as she grows up . . . or never having seen another child from the time he was born . . . it makes me want to hug my daughter, Risa . . . and to appreciate all that I do have!
Rating: Summary: A stunning picture of what it is like to become blind Review: This book was given to me as a gift a few years ago, and while I am neither going blind nor am actually blind, I found many of the ideas and experiences and thoughts and feelings expressed in this book to be very similar to my own. I have some particular cognitive difficulties (prosopagnosia, often called "face blindness") which give me a rather different outlook on life from most people, and I was amazed to see just how much in common my outlook on life was when compared with the author's life experiences. Well, maybe I wasn't that surprized, but it was still an eye-opening (no pun intended) experience for me to read this book in that context. Needless to say, I enjoyed this book very very much. It reads more like a personal journal or diary than an actual book, and that gives the whole book a very personal experience when reading it.
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