![]() ![]() It's every bit as riveting, especially the final moving chapter when Helen finally makes the connection between the finger-spelled word for water, her remembered word for it-wah-wah, and the water gushing from the pump.ĭon't assume your children know this story. This is a prose version of it, but from Annie's viewpoint. You've seen the movie, The Miracle Worker. ![]() Soon, though, the two are locked in battle over Helen's appalling mealtime behavior as Annie struggles to teach the wild child some manners, how to finger spell, and how to obey. Upon meeting her new pupil, the blind and deaf six-year-old Helen, Annie muses, "She seems so utterly alone, her look so familiar, for a moment I imagine I'm seeing the shadow of my own child-soul." Love-starved Annie is every bit as emotionally needy as her charge. Anne's thoughts drift back to her own traumatic childhood as a blind orphan living at Tewksbury, the Massachusetts state almshouse, losing her beloved little brother, Jimmy, and finally finding acceptance and training at the Perkins Institution for the Blind. ![]() It starts in 1887 with 20-year-old Anne on the train to Alabama to meet her new student. ![]() Reading this biographical novel, narrated by Anne Sullivan and based on her many letters, I was reminded once again why I, like so many others, have always been captivated by the story of Anne and Helen Keller, the little girl whose life she transformed. ![]()
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