[stylist] New Book, blindness on TV

Applebutter Hill applebutterhill at gmail.com
Wed Feb 12 23:39:50 UTC 2014


Chris,
I hope so too, and the fact that the writer had a blind father is
encouraging. He also said he didn't want it to be a portrayal of blind
people in general, which I don't really know how to interpret - since when
are any TV characters that generalized?

I also hear you about the mainstream publishing industry. Blind is a dirty
word. I have spoken with other blind women who say they were actually told
that their blind female characters were "unrealistic." We're supposed to be
helpless and carry our burden of sightlessness with a quiet dignity.

I actually removed any mention of it from my book descriptions online. I'll
probably get some flack for that, but the truth is that "blind" doesn't sell
books, and if you are a blind writer, one of the biggest hurdles is getting
someone to review the book like they'd review any other. It takes a lot for
people to get past how amazing you are for being a blind writer.

My hubby has really been trying to get me to think about the reality that
the book isn't all about blindness. I do, of course, talk about it when I'm
targeting niche markets like education professors, blindness rehab
counsellors, schools for the blind, etc. But for the general public, I don't
think it works at this time.

Maybe someday soon, people will see blind as the new black and want to hear
our stories, but my experience is that you really have to back-door the
issue, and that's not an easy thing to do. I just hope people will find the
description interesting and not read too far down into my bio.
Donna

-----Original Message-----
From: stylist [mailto:stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Chris Kuell
Sent: Wednesday, February 12, 2014 8:47 AM
To: Writer's Division Mailing List
Subject: Re: [stylist] New Book, blindness on TV

Donna,

I'm generally skeptical by nature, but I really hope they do a good job with
this show. It's exactly what we've been talking about here--an opportunity
to crush the stupid stereotypes and let the public see a guy who is
interesting, and just happens to be blind. If it does a good job, and if the
public enjoys it, it could open the door to more blind characters in the
arts. Personally, I feel certain that the reason books like yours and mine
aren't getting read by agents and traditional publishers is because we have
blind protagonists. An agent, or more likely, an agent's assistant reads my
query and thinks--a blind protagonist? Nobody is going to buy that. It's too
outside mainstream experience.

Hopefully, the times, they are a changing.

chris


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