Wild Things: YA Grown-Up discussion

47 views
And Everything Else > e-books for blind teens: HELP!

Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments Hey. Saw a post about this in another group, and I thought I would share it with you awesome people.


This is from Cory Doctorow, author of the truly awesome YA book Little Brother:

YA writers: Detroit public school teacher of blind kids wants your ebooks for her Braille printer

Back in August, I got a surprise in the mail: a long Braille computer printout and a letter. The letter was from Patti Smith, who teaches visually impaired middle-schoolers in Detroit's public school system. She explained that almost all the Braille kids' books she had access to were for really little kids -- kindergartners, basically -- and how discouraging this was for her kids.

The reason she was writing to me was to thank me for releasing my young adult novel Little Brother under a Creative Commons license, which meant that she could download the ebook version and run it through her school's Braille embosser (US copyright law makes it legal to convert any book to Braille or audiobook for blind people, but it is technically challenging and expensive to do this without the electronic text).

I wrote about this on my personal blog, and it inspired my colleague, the sf/f writer Paula Johansen, to write to Patti to offer up her own YA titles as ebooks for Patti's students.

Well, this got me thinking that there might be lots of YA writers who'd be glad to see their books get into the hands of visually impaired, literature-hungry students, so I worked with Patti to put together the pitch below. Please pass it along to all the YA writers you know. I would love to see Patti's class start the school year with a magnificent library of hundreds and hundreds of fantastic YA books to choose from, so that they can start a lifelong love-affair with literature.


This is the letter the teacher sent:
I am Patti Smith and I teach at OW Holmes, which is an elementary-middle
school in Detroit Public Schools in Detroit, Michigan. My students are
visually impaired, ranging in age from 2nd grade to 8th grade. Five of
my students are Braille writers and two are learning Braille. I would
love books for young adults in electronic format (Word or RTF) so that I can plug the
file into my computer program and emboss the book in Braille so my kids
can have something to read. I have found it very difficult to find books for young adults; most seem to be written for very young readers. My Braille readers are all age 11+ and it is a challenge to find relevant books for them to read. Thank you so much!!

Patti's email is TeacherPattiS@gmail.com

Thanks!
Here is the link to Cory's site


Here's a chance to win some karma points, people.


message 2: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments Also, if you didn't catch that, Cory put Little Brother (in it's entirety) on his website for download! It's awesome, you should check it out.


message 3: by Dawn (new)

Dawn | 6 comments Check this out, then!

Baen books makes it's whole library of E-Books free for disabled/blind/unable to handle regular books readers.

My disabled 17 year old has an account!

http://www.readassist.org/read/servic...


message 4: by Kandice (new)

Kandice Wow! I think that's great that not only did he make his book available, but is helping to get others to do so as well. I had no idea that not all books were available to Braille. Makes sense when you think about it. I hope they get access to many, many more books because of her efforts.


back to top