LYDIA DENWORTH is a former Newsweek reporter, London bureau chief at People, and professor of journalism at Fordham. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, Child, Redbook, Good Housekeeping, and other publications. She lives with her family in Brooklyn, New York.
"In this moving and informative book,
former Newsweek reporter Denworth recounts her emotional
and intellectual quest to help her deaf infant son hear. [...] This
is a book that parents, particularly of deaf children, may find
indispensable."—Publishers Weekly
"All parents will recognize the moments of both terror and pride
that mark the journey; parents of deaf children will garner both
information and insights."—Kirkus Reviews
"Eloquently explains how hearing works...An excellent book for
anyone with deafness in the family or with a desire to better
understand how people hear, why hearing loss occurs, and how it is
treated."—Booklist
“A beautiful book that combines superb scientific reporting with
powerful and deeply enjoyable storytelling. Her quest to acquire
every shred of knowledge she can to help her deaf son is an odyssey
that all parents who worry about their children (i.e. all parents)
can intimately relate to. Her discoveries about the workings of
language and the intricacies of brain development will change the
way you think about hearing, speaking, and selfhood. And her
fascinating exploration of the politics of deaf identity is sure to
spark a larger conversation about how we talk about, think about,
and treat children with special needs in our time.”—Judith Warner,
author of Perfect Madness: Motherhood in the Age of Anxiety
“Read this if you have ears or ever interact with humans. What a
moving and brilliant tour of the scientific, emotional and
political landscape of hearing impairment. As a reader, I'm
grateful to Lydia Denworth. As a writer, I'm jealous.”—David Shenk,
author of The Genius in All of Us and The Forgetting
“A lucid, engaging, and thoughtful description of the science of
hearing. If you are interested in hearing, speech, and language —as
a parent, educator, clinician, or scientist—this book fills an
important gap and is a terrific read. Careful about the science and
sensitive to the psychological complexities, Denworth provides a
masterful account of the path from ear to the brain, from sounds to
words.”—David Poeppel, Professor of Psychology and Neural Science,
New York University
“Lydia Denworth’s beautiful personal account and thorough
investigation connect the dots between her son’s hearing loss, the
essential import of spoken language on the developing brain, and
what parents, doctors, and teachers can gain from a deeper
understanding of how the mind acquires language.”—Dana Suskind, MD,
Professor of Surgery at the University of Chicago and Director of
The Thirty Million Words Initiative
“An affecting and searching personal story and a fascinating job of
science reporting, specifically the science of audiology—how we
hear, why some of us don't, and how an amazing, but controversial,
technology was invented. Lydia Denworth’s son Alex, the beautiful
boy at the center of the personal story, is lucky to have a mother
like her. The rest of us are lucky to have such a perceptive,
lucid, and touching book.”—Richard Bernstein, author of A Girl
Named Faithful Plum
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