The
Cleveland Plain Dealer: Sunday, June 18th, 2006
A potent look at journey into
blindness
by Sarah Willis
Writer Edna O'Brien put it this way: "What writing does is al
low us to sample each other's fate," and although she was discussing
fiction, this idea of sampling another's fate is exactly what a good
memoir does. From the safety of our own lives we can understand what
it's like to be raised in the foster system, be clinically depressed
or, as in "Cockeyed" by Ryan Knighton, to go blind. Knighton
invites us into his blindness, and through his reflective and simply
told story we literally see the world through his weakening eyes.
Knighton had an ordinary childhood in Langley, British Columbia, and
even the first hints of failing vision seemed the ordinary problems
any teenager might have: reading the wrong number, tripping over something
left on the ground, missing a stop sign, driving over a rock - although
Knighton drives over a whole row of boulders.
Finally he crashes the family car into a deep ditch, and his father
becomes so angry that his mother makes an appointment for the eye
doctor, just to appease her husband. Here the story veers from the
familiar. On his 18th birthday, Knighton discovers that he has retinitis
pigmentosa, a degenerative condition that will leave him blind.
"Cockeyed" tracks the passage from denial to acceptance.
Knighton charts this course in a series of chapters with odd titles,
such as "Bodysnatchers from the Planet of NASDAQ" and "The
Pusan Roach." Each reads like a short story, a moment or a time
seen alone, unconnected, small circles of stories that become whole
only when you put them all together.
There's the story about nightclubs, where "bumping into people
was acceptable, even expected." There's the story about teaching
English to children in South Korea while trying to pass as sighted
and the story about a trip to New Orleans, where two muggers apologize
when they realize that he's blind.
In all, there's humor and sadness, sometimes both in the very same
sentence. After the aborted mugging, "The two men patted me once
on the shoulder as they left, as if we were buddies, or I was a pet."
Knighton gives us the facts, then his interior response: "That
night didn't sit well with me for the rest of our trip. Something
had, in the end, been taken from me, something very small. A strange
kind of dignity . . . how does one get justice for not having been
mugged?"
In the middle of this memoir, Knighton's brother dies, a sad story
that feels, at first, dropped in, as dropped in as death can be, unconnected
to blindness. But a memoir is never about the thing, it's about the
person, and the brother's death shapes the writer, too.
There are no pyrotechnics here, no unbelievable moments, no stories
that feel stretched for the purpose of telling a better story. And
there is no whining, no "why me." Sometimes Knighton wanders
and a story can feel unimportant (he loses a shoe in a nightclub),
but then he comes back to the bigger picture, showing the most ordinary
thing now framed in his blindness.
Knighton was losing the last of his sight as he wrote "Cockeyed."
He can see some color and wavy blurred shapes and has a little tunnel
vision left. "If I look at the word 'dime' on this page, less
than half the letter 'm' is clear to me . . . dragging the rake of
my eye around . . . I collect holes of clarity."
Knighton sees the world in tiny circles. He writes his memoir in this
way, too. The whole becomes a powerful read.
Willis, a novelist and teacher, lives in Cleveland
Heights.
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