The Invention of Miracles - Katie Booth

The Invention of Miracles

Author: Katie Booth


  • Publication Date: 2021-04-06
  • Category: Biographies & Memoirs

Summary

This “provocative, sensitive, beautifully written biography” tells the true—and troubling—story of Alexander Graham Bell’s quest to end deafness (Sylvia Nasar, #1 New York Times–bestselling author).

Finalist for the PEN/Jacqueline Bograd Weld Award for Biography

Finalist for the Mark Lynton History Prize

We think of Alexander Graham Bell as the inventor of the telephone, but that’s not how he saw his own career. As the son of a deaf woman and, later, husband to another, his goal in life from adolescence was to teach deaf students to speak. Even his tinkering sprang from his teaching work; the telephone had its origins as a speech reading machine.

The Invention of Miracles takes a “stirring” (The New York Times Book Review), “provocative” (The Boston Globe), “scrupulously researched” (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) new look at an American icon, revealing the astonishing true genesis of the telephone and its connection to another, far more disturbing legacy of Bell’s: his efforts to suppress American Sign Language. Weaving together a dazzling tale of innovation with a moving love story, the book offers a heartbreaking account of how a champion can become an adversary and an enthralling depiction of the deaf community’s fight to reclaim a once-forbidden language.

Katie Booth has been researching this story for more than fifteen years, poring over Bell’s papers, Library of Congress archives, and the records of deaf schools around America. But she’s also lived with this story for her entire life. Witnessing the damaging impact of Bell’s legacy on her family would set her on a path that overturned everything she thought she knew about language, power, deafness, and the telephone.

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