cover image MY PATH LEADS TO TIBET: The Inspiring Story of How One Young Blind Woman Brought Hope to the Blind Children of Tibet

MY PATH LEADS TO TIBET: The Inspiring Story of How One Young Blind Woman Brought Hope to the Blind Children of Tibet

Sabriye Tenberken, . . Arcade, $24.95 (296pp) ISBN 978-1-55970-658-2

When Tenberken, whose battle with retinal disease left her blind at age 13, was in her 20s, she studied Tibetan culture at the University of Bonn. Frustrated by the awkward character-recognition machinery she had to use to read Tibetan materials, she devised a Tibetan braille alphabet, so that once translated, works could be directly readable by the blind. What followed seemed natural to her: she'd go to Tibet and start a school to teach this braille to blind Tibetan children. Traveling on horseback over treacherous mountain passes, sleeping in rat-infested huts and dealing with self-interested charitable bureaucracies, Tenberken managed to keep her humor and courage. She succeeded in establishing a school, and her organization, "Braille Without Borders," continues the literacy mission in other countries. While stories of triumph over adversity are often compelling, Tenberken gives something more: her own point of view on life as a blind person. Why does she go out of her way to visit stunning landscapes? Why are colors meaningful to her? "I consider myself a very visual person," Tenberken explains, aware that not all blind people—or "sighted" people, for that matter—have "visual imaginations." "Besides, why wouldn't a world informed and described by one's imagination be better than reality?" Photos not seen by PW. (Jan.)

Forecast: Readers looking for a good travel yarn or an old-fashioned story of bravery conquering all obstacles, as well as those interested in disability issues, will love Tenberken's saga. With the major promo tour Arcade plans, it could be popular, despite the clunky title.