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TRAVELS WITH TEELA: Krieger’s
next book will explore issues of mobility without
sight, including stories about navigating with a
guide dog.
Linda A. Cicero |
Last winter,
Susan Krieger got on the phone
to a florist in Wisconsin. “I said, ‘I want flowers—big,
dramatic flowers.’ ” Sent to?
The compositor and managing editor of the University of Wisconsin
Press.
For Krieger, a lecturer in the program in feminist studies,
Humanities and Sciences Fellow at the Institute for Research
on Women and Gender and author of four previous books, having
another book published typically wouldn’t have been
such a huge event. But this title was different. Things
No Longer There: A Memoir of Losing Sight and Finding Vision includes
an account of how Krieger lost her sight over a period of five
years to a rare disease called birdshot retinochoroidopathy.
She had worked with the press for months to ensure that a digital
version for blind readers would be published simultaneously
with the print book. “For me, the book came out when
I got the e-book,” she says. “I felt like I could
navigate it, and I was elated.”
Krieger’s new work is at home on several bookstore shelves:
memoir, disability studies, or gay and lesbian studies.
Personal stories about a former summer camp, birdwatching
and lesbian lovers are collected with essays that address
the nature of blindness and sight. Krieger’s loss of
vision began after she’d written some of the pieces,
but not before she’d settled on the title. “I was
writing very pictorially,” she recalls. “I was
looking for clarity.” Then she was diagnosed. “And
I thought, ‘Well,
that fits with my theme.’ ”
For the past three years, Krieger has taught a course called
Seminar in Women’s Health: Women and Disabilities.
She says teaching and writing about her loss of vision have
given her an outlet that many blind people don’t have. “I
feel fortunate that in the past I’ve had to deal with
so many emotional things that I’m prepared for this.
Losing my vision is not the worst thing in the world, and I’m
going to be fine.”
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