(8/12/2021)
A decade ago I read "Crashing Through: A True Story of Risk, Adventure, and the Man Who Dared to See" written by Robert Kurson about Mike May, blinded at age three, who defied expectations by breaking world records in downhill speed skiing, joining the CIA, and becoming a successful inventor, entrepreneur, and family man. He had never yearned for vision. I found his life story so enthralling that I contacted my local Blind Association to volunteer in the community for others who were vision impaired. I did not have the same emotional reaction to "Blind Man's Bluff" by James Tate Hill. In fact I found this memoir rather unemotional and dry of details. Yes, we learn of the author's diagnosis and his desire to navigate life, undetected by others, with the challenges his diminishing abilities present, but the chapters seemed to provide journal-entry details with true feelings unattached. As a reader I wanted more inspiration from his efforts to achieve. I wanted a clearer picture of the devastation that often presents when life does not easily accommodate a person with disabilities. I wanted to be inspired by the author's spirit to succeed. I wanted to know more about how he discovered the internal will to reinvent daily life to suit a person with vision deficiencies. Clearly the author is now a published writer, but I found myself more interested in the heroics of his parents, Jim and Belinda, who believed in his abilities all along giving him independence long before he had proven the maturity to handle such challenges. I do find his life accomplishments admirable and for that his story has earned 3 stars, but I was left wanting so much more...a clearer understanding of how to succeed without the advantages of full sight.