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The World At Her Fingertips: Story Of Helen Keller, The | 
enlarge | Author: Joan Dash Publisher: Scholastic Paperbacks Category: Book
List Price: $4.99 Buy Used: $0.11 You Save: $4.88 (98%)
New (6) Used (27) from $0.11
Avg. Customer Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 787533
Media: Mass Market Paperback Edition: Reprint Reading Level: Ages 4-8 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 240 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.3 x 0.6
ISBN: 0590907166 Dewey Decimal Number: 362.41092 EAN: 9780590907163 ASIN: 0590907166
Publication Date: August 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Help save a tree. Buy all your used books from Green Earth Books. Read -> Recycle -> Reuse!
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Product Description
This lively biography goes beyond Helen's youth and learning process and includes many fascinating details of her later life, including her college years and involvement with politics. It's "riveting reading for sudents in need of inspiration, or who're overcoming disability or studying changing expectations for women (Kirkus)."
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Ignorant to Inspired May 28, 2008 As a young girl, I was told about the life of Helen Keller--the basics, nothing too detailed. My mother took me to see the Miracle Worker and I was amazed at Helen's capability to grasp something that she could not see or hear. This book gave me a new perspective on her life: her determination to succeed in her studies, her financial problems, her relationship Anne Sullivan, Alexander Graham Bell, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and her support for socialism. This book covers it all, and instills a new respect for Helen in the reader.
AThe World At Her Fingertips December 15, 2006 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
"Do you believe in life after death?" "Most certainly. It's no more than passing from one room into another.... But there's a difference for me, you know. Because in that other - room - I shall be able to see." The World At Her Fingertips, a biography on Helen Keller, explores the public and well known life of Helen Keller. Keller lost her eyesight and hearing around the age of one, which called for a different kind of learning. With the help of Annie Sullivan she pursued her dreams of going to school and became well known for her achievements, despite her handicap, and her determination. The story itself of Helen Keller's life is inspiring, therefore, I would recommend this book.
One reason I recommend this book is because of the inspiration it gives. It was inspiring from beginning to end. In the beginning of the book Helen, deaf and blind, began to learn words and that was inspiring because it shows that we all have the potential to do things if we try. At the end she was asked if she believed in life after death. She responded by saying she most certainly did, for it was no more than passing from one room into another, but the only difference for her would be that she would gain sight of the things around her.
Another reason I'd recommend this book is because of the education it gives in return of reading it. You learn more about Helen Keller's life but also the people around her, and how society was in the early 1900's.
Although I really liked this book there was some confusion in it. In the book, Annie Sullivan, Helen's teacher, was often referred to as "Teacher" by Helen, but the thing that I was confused over was whether it was really what Helen called her, or was it just a nickname the author used.
When I first picked up this book I thought, this is going to be one boring book, but after I sat down and started reading it I really came to like it. So whether you are into reading biographies or not, I recommend this book, because it is an inspiring biography and life story.
J. Moss
helen keller March 23, 2006 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
the book was interesting but a bit unclear. it got confusing at times
Informative Book October 3, 2005 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I enjoyed reading the book, The World At Her Fingertips: The Story of Helen Keller, because I think that this book is informative. It has a lot of information based on Helen Keller that can help you learn a lot about her. I think it's not only an educational book but it can be fun to read during your spare time. Frankly, I found that Helen Keller was an extoradinary woman who succeded through life without letting her blindness and deafness take control over it. I learned a lot more about Helen Keller than I did before before. I think the author did a great job portraying and explaining Helen's lifestyle. With this book you will know and understand who Helen Keller was and how she went through life without ever giving up because of certain diseases.
You will come away feeling empowered by this story. July 22, 2004 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
This is a good biography of Helen Keller (1880-1968), the blind and deaf girl who demonstrated that many things in life were still possible to those with physical challenges. This volume covers all the major events and important people in Keller's life. Because she was in the public spotlight for most of her years, this book talks about many of the great public figures and events of Keller's day. The book includes two sets of pictures, one from her early and one from her later years. You'll read about her personal struggles, her private fears, her education, her work, and her politics. And you'll be amazed at the full and productive life of one of the most remarkable women who ever lived. From the time that she was six years old until the end of her long life, Helen was famous. It began as an accidental tragedy: she developed a fever that almost killed her when she was 19 months old. When she recovered, her sight faded slowly away; her parents learned that she had become deaf also. The last word to fade away from Helen was the word "water." Then there was nothing. She lived the first few years of her life like a little savage, unable to be reached by those around her except in the most primitive of human communications, touch. She ate by roaming around the dinner table and sticking her hands into other people's plates. Nobody knew how to discipline a child who was so severely handicapped --- and it seemed cruel to discipline her at all. But Helen was highly intelligent, and she knew that other people could talk with their mouths in a way that she could not. Her rage at this "differentness" that she could not understand found its expression in what she later called the Phantom. When the Phantom side of Helen's personality appeared, she was wild, physically strong, and almost uncontrollable. Then, when Helen was six years old, her parents learned about the Perkins Institution for the Blind in Boston. They asked for a teacher to come and help Helen. And the school sent a 20-year-old girl who was barely sighted herself, Annie Sullivan. Annie, in one month, taught Helen what a word is and that everything has a name. With that one key, Annie opened the world to Helen and empowered her to become a part of it. Helen was born in June 1880, on a farm in Alabama. She died a world-famous woman in June 1968. Her life spanned two world wars. She traveled around the entire globe. In 1904, she graduated cum laude (with praise) from Radcliffe College. During her career, she gave lectures, worked in vaudeville, and mingled with presidents, kings, and emperors. She helped to raise the world's consciousness about blindness and deafness. People became aware of what the handicapped could accomplish and that they didn't need to be pitied and shut away from the world. Though it's a biography of Keller, this book really tells the story of two remarkable women, Helen and Annie. Throughout her long life, Helen remained devoted to Annie, whom she always called Teacher. As remarkable as Helen's hard work and life's achievement were, they were matched by Annie's. Annie Sullivan gave her entire life to the furtherance of Helen's experiences. It was Annie who sat beside Helen in every class during her college years, tapping into her hand everything the instructors said. And it was Annie who read her college texts to her endlessly, sacrificing her own failing eyesight to do so. You will come away feeling empowered by this story about what can be accomplished when people dedicate their lives to a high purpose. ---Reviewed by Tamara Penny
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