The Courier Mail; Date: 2007 March 23; Section: Entertainment
What makes Australia grate
reviewed by IAN BARRY
HOW many of the things that you do depend on your sight? How
many words, in any language you can name, are concerned with vision
and light? Words referring to sight are built in and integral to
the way we give meaning to the world. Consider then how different
your life would be if you gradually lost your sight to the point
of total blindness.
Ryan Knighton has first-hand experience of slow and inevitable sight
deterioration and has written a book on his life which gives us access
to the world of the visually disadvantaged. He would say blind.
As far back as he could remember, Ryan was always the clumsy kid.
Growing up in Langley, British Columbia, Canada, with his parents
and siblings, he had a normal enough childhood, occasionally punctuated
by inexplicable gaps in his interactions with the world.
When
his doctor diagnosed retinitis pigmentosa, a degenerative and untreatable
eye disease, on the day of his 18th birthday, many episodes in
his life suddenly became understandable – the strange things
that happened on his childhood paper route; the inexplicable accidents
at his first job; his woeful driving record and those disappearing
trousers, among many other things.
As
Knighton himself says, it is difficult to not use words like "hindsight" in
a situation like his.
Fortunately, he was also blessed with a love of words and a scrupulous
honesty. This book is a rigorous self-examination by a man undergoing
a reluctant transformation, written by someone who understands how
to tell a story. It is as honest an account of a modern life, with
all its joys and tragedies, humour, foibles and insights, as you
are likely to find.
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