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Mother Tongue
The New York Times bestselling author of True Biz retraces her path out of the hearing world and into the deaf communityāand seeks to understand what it means to raise children who are different from herāin this emotionally rich memoir.
āIn this enraging history and big-hearted family saga, Sara NoviÄ has skillfully subverted the dividing lines of identity, her deafness becoming the thread that connects us all.āāSierra Crane Murdoch, author of Yellow Bird
Sara NoviÄās early years were steeped in music, Bible study, and a strong desire to fit in. But when she failed her schoolās mandated hearing test, her worldview was thrown into chaos. Desperate not to be marked as different, she told no one, staying in the hearing world for as long as she could by brute force.
Eventually unable to ignore the fact that she was deaf, NoviÄ sought out other deaf people and was welcomed into a tight knit community rooted in the beauty and joy of American Sign Language. NoviÄ realized that rather than maintaining the facade of her old life or trying to straddle two worlds, she would need to cultivate an existence in the space between.
Now the mother of two young sonsāone, biological and hearing, the other, adopted and deafāNoviÄ reflects on her life both before and after parenthood. Sheās raising her children within the deaf world, offering them things her younger self needed, all the while knowing that as her children grow, their own paths will branch off from hers in ways she cannot fully predict or plan for.
Interwoven with NoviÄ's personal story is a remarkable portrait of America through reflections on some of its most complex histories: the rise of the Christian right, the thorny world of international adoption, and above all, the deaf and disabled communitiesā stubborn survival in the face of persistent oppression.
NoviÄās clear, bold voice is one readers will hold onto, learn from, argue with, and be inspired by, as she asks us to recognize difference as a source of opportunity rather than fear, as a chance to draw families and communities together, and to build something new.
āIn this enraging history and big-hearted family saga, Sara NoviÄ has skillfully subverted the dividing lines of identity, her deafness becoming the thread that connects us all.āāSierra Crane Murdoch, author of Yellow Bird
Sara NoviÄās early years were steeped in music, Bible study, and a strong desire to fit in. But when she failed her schoolās mandated hearing test, her worldview was thrown into chaos. Desperate not to be marked as different, she told no one, staying in the hearing world for as long as she could by brute force.
Eventually unable to ignore the fact that she was deaf, NoviÄ sought out other deaf people and was welcomed into a tight knit community rooted in the beauty and joy of American Sign Language. NoviÄ realized that rather than maintaining the facade of her old life or trying to straddle two worlds, she would need to cultivate an existence in the space between.
Now the mother of two young sonsāone, biological and hearing, the other, adopted and deafāNoviÄ reflects on her life both before and after parenthood. Sheās raising her children within the deaf world, offering them things her younger self needed, all the while knowing that as her children grow, their own paths will branch off from hers in ways she cannot fully predict or plan for.
Interwoven with NoviÄ's personal story is a remarkable portrait of America through reflections on some of its most complex histories: the rise of the Christian right, the thorny world of international adoption, and above all, the deaf and disabled communitiesā stubborn survival in the face of persistent oppression.
NoviÄās clear, bold voice is one readers will hold onto, learn from, argue with, and be inspired by, as she asks us to recognize difference as a source of opportunity rather than fear, as a chance to draw families and communities together, and to build something new.
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Mother Tongue
Mother Tongue
The New York Times bestselling author of True Biz retraces her path out of the hearing world and into the deaf communityāand seeks to understand what it means to raise children who are different from herāin this emotionally rich memoir.
āIn this enraging history and big-hearted family saga, Sara NoviÄ has skillfully subverted the dividing lines of identity, her deafness becoming the thread that connects us all.āāSierra Crane Murdoch, author of Yellow Bird
Sara NoviÄās early years were steeped in music, Bible study, and a strong desire to fit in. But when she failed her schoolās mandated hearing test, her worldview was thrown into chaos. Desperate not to be marked as different, she told no one, staying in the hearing world for as long as she could by brute force.
Eventually unable to ignore the fact that she was deaf, NoviÄ sought out other deaf people and was welcomed into a tight knit community rooted in the beauty and joy of American Sign Language. NoviÄ realized that rather than maintaining the facade of her old life or trying to straddle two worlds, she would need to cultivate an existence in the space between.
Now the mother of two young sonsāone, biological and hearing, the other, adopted and deafāNoviÄ reflects on her life both before and after parenthood. Sheās raising her children within the deaf world, offering them things her younger self needed, all the while knowing that as her children grow, their own paths will branch off from hers in ways she cannot fully predict or plan for.
Interwoven with NoviÄ's personal story is a remarkable portrait of America through reflections on some of its most complex histories: the rise of the Christian right, the thorny world of international adoption, and above all, the deaf and disabled communitiesā stubborn survival in the face of persistent oppression.
NoviÄās clear, bold voice is one readers will hold onto, learn from, argue with, and be inspired by, as she asks us to recognize difference as a source of opportunity rather than fear, as a chance to draw families and communities together, and to build something new.
āIn this enraging history and big-hearted family saga, Sara NoviÄ has skillfully subverted the dividing lines of identity, her deafness becoming the thread that connects us all.āāSierra Crane Murdoch, author of Yellow Bird
Sara NoviÄās early years were steeped in music, Bible study, and a strong desire to fit in. But when she failed her schoolās mandated hearing test, her worldview was thrown into chaos. Desperate not to be marked as different, she told no one, staying in the hearing world for as long as she could by brute force.
Eventually unable to ignore the fact that she was deaf, NoviÄ sought out other deaf people and was welcomed into a tight knit community rooted in the beauty and joy of American Sign Language. NoviÄ realized that rather than maintaining the facade of her old life or trying to straddle two worlds, she would need to cultivate an existence in the space between.
Now the mother of two young sonsāone, biological and hearing, the other, adopted and deafāNoviÄ reflects on her life both before and after parenthood. Sheās raising her children within the deaf world, offering them things her younger self needed, all the while knowing that as her children grow, their own paths will branch off from hers in ways she cannot fully predict or plan for.
Interwoven with NoviÄ's personal story is a remarkable portrait of America through reflections on some of its most complex histories: the rise of the Christian right, the thorny world of international adoption, and above all, the deaf and disabled communitiesā stubborn survival in the face of persistent oppression.
NoviÄās clear, bold voice is one readers will hold onto, learn from, argue with, and be inspired by, as she asks us to recognize difference as a source of opportunity rather than fear, as a chance to draw families and communities together, and to build something new.
$20.00
Mother Tongueā
$20.00
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Description
The New York Times bestselling author of True Biz retraces her path out of the hearing world and into the deaf communityāand seeks to understand what it means to raise children who are different from herāin this emotionally rich memoir.
āIn this enraging history and big-hearted family saga, Sara NoviÄ has skillfully subverted the dividing lines of identity, her deafness becoming the thread that connects us all.āāSierra Crane Murdoch, author of Yellow Bird
Sara NoviÄās early years were steeped in music, Bible study, and a strong desire to fit in. But when she failed her schoolās mandated hearing test, her worldview was thrown into chaos. Desperate not to be marked as different, she told no one, staying in the hearing world for as long as she could by brute force.
Eventually unable to ignore the fact that she was deaf, NoviÄ sought out other deaf people and was welcomed into a tight knit community rooted in the beauty and joy of American Sign Language. NoviÄ realized that rather than maintaining the facade of her old life or trying to straddle two worlds, she would need to cultivate an existence in the space between.
Now the mother of two young sonsāone, biological and hearing, the other, adopted and deafāNoviÄ reflects on her life both before and after parenthood. Sheās raising her children within the deaf world, offering them things her younger self needed, all the while knowing that as her children grow, their own paths will branch off from hers in ways she cannot fully predict or plan for.
Interwoven with NoviÄ's personal story is a remarkable portrait of America through reflections on some of its most complex histories: the rise of the Christian right, the thorny world of international adoption, and above all, the deaf and disabled communitiesā stubborn survival in the face of persistent oppression.
NoviÄās clear, bold voice is one readers will hold onto, learn from, argue with, and be inspired by, as she asks us to recognize difference as a source of opportunity rather than fear, as a chance to draw families and communities together, and to build something new.
āIn this enraging history and big-hearted family saga, Sara NoviÄ has skillfully subverted the dividing lines of identity, her deafness becoming the thread that connects us all.āāSierra Crane Murdoch, author of Yellow Bird
Sara NoviÄās early years were steeped in music, Bible study, and a strong desire to fit in. But when she failed her schoolās mandated hearing test, her worldview was thrown into chaos. Desperate not to be marked as different, she told no one, staying in the hearing world for as long as she could by brute force.
Eventually unable to ignore the fact that she was deaf, NoviÄ sought out other deaf people and was welcomed into a tight knit community rooted in the beauty and joy of American Sign Language. NoviÄ realized that rather than maintaining the facade of her old life or trying to straddle two worlds, she would need to cultivate an existence in the space between.
Now the mother of two young sonsāone, biological and hearing, the other, adopted and deafāNoviÄ reflects on her life both before and after parenthood. Sheās raising her children within the deaf world, offering them things her younger self needed, all the while knowing that as her children grow, their own paths will branch off from hers in ways she cannot fully predict or plan for.
Interwoven with NoviÄ's personal story is a remarkable portrait of America through reflections on some of its most complex histories: the rise of the Christian right, the thorny world of international adoption, and above all, the deaf and disabled communitiesā stubborn survival in the face of persistent oppression.
NoviÄās clear, bold voice is one readers will hold onto, learn from, argue with, and be inspired by, as she asks us to recognize difference as a source of opportunity rather than fear, as a chance to draw families and communities together, and to build something new.












