This is the inspiring photobiography of Anne Mansfield Sullivan, a woman born into a life of daunting disadvantage and social obstacle. She grew up poor, with little education, the child of struggling Irish immigrants. By the age of eight, Annie was almost blind because of untreated trachoma. Following her mother’s death, the young girl entered an almshouse, where she spent four years among the most wretched of society’s outcasts. Her inquiring intellect and determination helped her escape this bleak detention, and she was sent to the Perkins School for the Blind.
There, at the age of 14, her education began, and her lively mind soon blossomed. After graduation, she was hired as a teacher for Helen Keller, a six-year-old girl who was blind and deaf due to illness. With patience and compassion, Annie reached into the dark, silent world of the little girl, opening her mind and soul to life’s beauty. She became "Helen’s eyes." Because of her inspired breakthroughs and accomplishments with Helen, Annie was soon known as the "Miracle Worker." Annie and Helen spent the rest of their lives together two complex women with feisty personalities who achieved international acclaim.
17914/SD/18 | 923.7/DEL/h | Perpustakaan Gd. D | Available |
Series Title
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Call Number
923.7/DEL/h
Publisher
National Geographic : Washington Dc., 2015
Collation
64 hlm.; 24 cm.
Language
English
ISBN/ISSN
9781426322228
Classification
923.7
Content Type
-
Media Type
-
Carrier Type
-
Edition
-
Specific Detail Info
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Statement of Responsibility
by Marfe Ferguson Delano