'By the summer of 1998, it had become clear that there was something wrong with my hearing. It didn't happen suddenly but softly, so softly I almost wasn't aware of it happening; sound seemed to have stolen away ...'
For twelve years, Bella Bathurst's life was ruled by her deafness. She missed the punchlines and the jokes, avoided busy restaurants and raucous parties, grew her hair long to cover hearing aids, and retreated into herself. But then, twelve years later, pioneering surgery on her ears gave her the chance to hear again.
Sound is the extraordinary story of Bella's journey into deafness and back to hearing. Mixing memoir with interviews with soldiers, sign language experts, musicians and mental health workers, Bella explores what deafness teaches us about listening and silence, and what the deaf know that the hearing don't.
If sight gives us the world, then hearing - or our ability to listen - gives us each other.
Published in partnership with the Wellcome Collection.
Wellcome Collection is the free museum and library for the incurably curious. It explores the connections between medicine, life and art in the past, present and future. It is part of Wellcome, a global charitable foundation that exists to improve health for everyone by helping great ideas thrive.
'By the summer of 1998, it had become clear that there was something wrong with my hearing. It didn't happen suddenly but softly, so softly I almost wasn't aware of it happening; sound seemed to have stolen away ...'
For twelve years, Bella Bathurst's life was ruled by her deafness. She missed the punchlines and the jokes, avoided busy restaurants and raucous parties, grew her hair long to cover hearing aids, and retreated into herself. But then, twelve years later, pioneering surgery on her ears gave her the chance to hear again.
Sound is the extraordinary story of Bella's journey into deafness and back to hearing. Mixing memoir with interviews with soldiers, sign language experts, musicians and mental health workers, Bella explores what deafness teaches us about listening and silence, and what the deaf know that the hearing don't.
If sight gives us the world, then hearing - or our ability to listen - gives us each other.
Published in partnership with the Wellcome Collection.
Wellcome Collection is the free museum and library for the incurably curious. It explores the connections between medicine, life and art in the past, present and future. It is part of Wellcome, a global charitable foundation that exists to improve health for everyone by helping great ideas thrive.
An astonishing personal journey from hearing to deafness and back again helps Bella Bathurst explore what sound, listening and silence mean to us
Bella Bathurst is a writer and photojournalist. Her books include The Lighthouse Stevensons which won the 1999 Somerset Maugham Award, The Wreckers, which became a BBC Timewatch documentary, and The Bicycle Book, which was shortlisted for the William Hill Sports Book of the Year 2011.
A book to remind us to treasure the gift of sound.
*Times*
Fascinating ... Bathurst is a restless, curious writer, and she
interweaves the story of her own experiences with imaginative
research around hearing and sound ... After reading this book, I
found myself listening in a richer and more interested way.
*Guardian*
'Extraordinary ... echoes long after you have turned the final
page.
*Mail on Sunday*
'Her writing draws on all the senses ... This is a moving and
fascinating book, all about sound and what it means to be human. It
has its share of sound and fury, and benefits from a journalist's
ability to listen. Many people with hearing loss, and more without,
would benefit from hearing its message.
*Financial Times*
Terrifying, absorbing and ultimately uplifting. It's a hymn to the
faculty of hearing by someone who had it, lost it and then found it
again, written with passion and intelligence and full of matters
that I knew little about. It's a brave and important work
*Literary Review*
An empathetic, sensitive look at how a physical loss can transform
the way you understand the world and how you live in it
*Sunday Express*
Poignant ... I suspect [deafness] sharpened her writing. Bathurst's
drive to communicate has been channelled into excellent
non-fiction
*Daily Telegraph*
Bathurst is good on aural geography ... when her hearing is
restored, it is returned to someone who is profoundly changed by
the experience
*Guardian*
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