"Bio"-Adversity

Enjoy biographies? For motivation and inspiration, read about individuals who have overcome physical challenges and carried on to lead successful, productive lives. Heroes, after all, know no boundaries!



Lance Allred
Longshot: The Adventures of a Deaf Fundamentalist Mormon Kid and his Journey to the NBA by Lance Allred, HarpOne, 2009.
The NBA's first legally deaf player recounts his childhood on a polygamist compound in Montana, the difficulties he faced playing collegiate basketball, his brief time playing professionally in Europe, and the success that eventually brought him to the Cleveland Cavaliers.


Lance Armstrong
It's Not About the Bike: My Journey Back to Life by Lance Armstrong, with Sally Jenkins. Putnam, 2000.
In 1996, Armstrong was diagnosed with testicular cancer and informed that his career as a world class cyclist was over. Less than three years later, after successfully battling the disease, the determined athlete proved the medical experts wrong by winning the grueling Tour de France. He went on to win the race five more times. For further reading: Every Second Counts by Lance Armstrong and Sally Jenkins (Broadway, 2003).

Ludwig van Beethoven
Beethoven by Maynard Solomon, 1998.
This book is a major reinterpretation of the life, personality, and works of the enigmatic musical genius who began to lose his hearing at the age of 31. Rigorously meticulous and objective, it is also renowned for its highly original interpretations of Beethoven's personality, his inner conflicts, patronage affiliations, intellectual and religious tenets, and the dynamics of his family constellation. Through these, we meet an infinitely more complex, and human, Beethoven than has been known from earlier biographies. Also, an extended chapter presents the evidence for Solomon's compelling solution to the riddle of Beethoven's "Immortal Beloved."

Andrea Bocelli
Andrea Bocelli: A Celebration by Antonia Felix. St. Martin's, 2000.
This detailed biography chronicles the singer's childhood in the Tuscan countryside, his early ambitions and passion for singing, the disease and accident that caused his blindness at age 12, the uncompromising philosophy of his strong and loving family, the Italian musical legacy that has shaped him, and the spiritual beliefs that sustain him.

Brian Boyle
Iron Heart: The true Story of How I Came Back from the Dead by Brian Boyle with Bill Katovsky. Skyhorse, 2009.
How a young swimmer and bodybuilder Brian Boyle overcame a traumatic car accident that left him in a coma and relearned how to walk, run, and swim in order to realize his dream of competing in the prestigious Ironman triathlon.

Tedy Bruschi
Never Give Up: My Stroke, My recovery & My Return to the NFL by Tedy Bruschi w/ Michael Holley. Wiley, 2007.
Only 10 days after helping the New England Patriots win the 2005 Super Bowl, 31-year-old middle linebacker Bruschi was felled by a stroke. Although many believed his football career to be over, Bruschi faced the physical and emotional challenges of this life-threatening event head-on, and with help from dedicated medical professionals and excellent modern treatment and therapy, he was able to rejoin the team just 8 months later. His book is intended to raise both public awareness of the condition and act as a vital message for stroke survivors never to quit.

Kathy Buckley
If You Could Hear What I See: Lessons About Life, Luck, & the Choices We Make by Kathy Buckley, with Lynette Padwa. Dutton, 2000.
Labelled mentally retarded by an uncaring school system, comedian Buckley shares the pain of growing up hearing impaired as well as surviving childhood molestation and cervical cancer.

Chris Burke
A Special Kind of Hero: Chris Burke's Own Story by Chris Burke and Jo Beth McDaniel, 1991.
The tale of how one family raised a Down's Syndrome child to achieve far beyond expectations. Chris became one of America's favorite personalities, starring as "Corky" on the hit television series Life Goes On. Not since Helen Keller has one person so thoroughly changed the way the world views people with disabilities.

Ray Charles
Brother Ray: Ray Charles' Own Story by Ray Charles and David Ritz, 1978.
This is a drama of survival and success against staggering odds. Born black and poor in the deep south, blinded as a small boy, orphaned as a teenager, by age thirty-two Ray Charles was acclaimed the world over as a musical genius. This is the story of one man's triumph over tragedy and pain to ultimate success.

Kortney Clemons
Amped: A Soldier's Race for Gold in the Shadow of War by Kortney Clemons, with Bill Briggs. Wiley, 2008.
17 months after losing his right leg to a roadside bomb in Baghdad while coming to the aid of a fallen comrade, Clemons overcame all odds to pursue his dream of becoming the first Iraq veteran to win gold in the 100-meter race in at the 2008 U.S. Paralympic Track & Field Championships in Beijing.

Brooke Ellison
Miracles Happen: One Mother, One Daughter, One Journey by Brooke and Jean Ellison, 2001.
At age 11, Brooke Ellison was left paralyzed from the neck down after being struck by an automobile. In this book, Brooke and her mother, Jean, document the exhausting efforts and dedication that it took for Brooke to beat overwhelming odds and finally graduate from Harvard University, with honors!

Betty Ford
Betty, A Glad Awakening by Betty Ford with Chris Chase, 1987.
This is the deeply personal story of one of the most celebrated women of our time. It is a moving memoir in which Betty Ford shares her experience, understanding, and hope so that other men and women can discover that alcoholism and drug addiction need not rob them of their lives.

Kenny Fries
Body, Remember: A Memoir by Kenny Fries, 1997.
Both physically disabled and a homosexual, Kenny Fries has had to "climb uphill" all of his life. Born with congenital deformities of his lower extremities, he writes, loves, and lives life passionately. He is a living testament to perseverance in the face of overwhelming odds.

Jami Goldman
Up and Running: The Jami Goldman Story by Jami Goldman and Andrea Cagan, 2001.
Meet tall, beautiful Jami Goldman: world-class athlete, Adidas spokesperson, motivational speaker -- and double amputee. More than a decade ago, a wrong turn on a back road during a blizzard resulted in a terrifying fight for her life. Now, for the first time, Jami recounts her gripping story of being trapped in the snow for eleven days, the grievous loss of her legs from severe frostbite, and the fortitude it has taken not only to walk again, but run like the wind!

Stephen Hawking
Steven Hawking: A Life in Science by Michael White and John Gribbon, 1992.
Physicist Stephen Hawking cannot walk, stand, feed himself, speak, or write. Stricken with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's Disease, as a young man he has, nonetheless, contributed more toward the theory of the origin and evolution of the universe than any other person in the latter part of the twentieth century.

John Hockenberry
Moving Violations: War Zones, Wheelchairs, and Declarations of Independence by John Hockenberry, 1995.
By no means was it a dark and stormy night. It was, in fact, a beautiful, sunny February day when journalist John Hockenberry's life was forever changed due to an automobile accident. He now continues to conduct his life all over the world, and quite well actually, from his wheelchair. This is an unforgettable account of John's struggle to be free within the confines of paralysis
.

Ed Hommer
The Hill: A True Story of Tragedy, Recovery, and Redemption on North America's Highest Peak, by Ed Hommer, with Daniel Paisner. Rodale, 2001.
After losing both feet to frostbite following a plane crash in Alaska, bushpilot Hommer overcame both depression & alcoholism to make it as a pilot for American Airlines and fulfill his dream of climbing to the summit of Mt. McKinley.

Helen Keller
The Story of My Life by Helen Keller, 1954.
Helen Keller met life head on in spite of mind-boggling handicaps. After losing both her sight and hearing through illness as a young child, she managed to respond fully to her surroundings and to lead as "normal" a life, as possible. Her autobiography simply inspires!

Jill Kinmont
The Other Side of the Mountain: The Story of Jill Kinmont by E. G. Valens, 1988.
Jill Kinmont had been a leading candidate for the U. S. Olympic ski team, when a skiing accident left her paralyzed from the shoulders down. How she came to terms with her experience and went on the lead a meaningful life makes fascinating reading.

Emmanuelle Laborit
The Cry of the Gull by Emmanuelle Laborit. Gallaudet University Press, 1998, 1994.
At the age of nine months, Laborit was diagnosed as deaf. Not until the age of 7 did she discover sign language (banned as "obscene" in France until 1976) and a new world opened for her. After a period of typical teenage rebellion, she reassed her life, devoted herself to acting, and in 1993 became the first French actor to win the prestigious Moliere Award for "best new talent."

David L. Lander
Fall Down, Laughing: How Squiggy Caught Multiple Sclerosis and Didn't Tell Nobody by David L. Lander with Lee Montgomery, 2000.
In the summer of 1999, David Lander revealed publicly that he suffers from multiple sclerosis (MS) - a secret he'd kept for fifteen years, even while living and working in Hollywood's celebrity fish bowl. Diagnosed with the illness after filming the last episode of Laverne and Shirley, Lander continued to develop his film and television career while hiding his illness. His success is an astonishing testament to his physical and emotional strength, and his determination to prove that those with MS can still enjoy fulfilling and challenging lives.

Heather Mills McCartney
A Single Step by Heather Mills McCartney, with Pamela Cockerill. Warner, 2002, 1995.
After an accident left her with a partially amputated leg that all but ended her career as a fashion model, Mills, a successful businesswoman and land-mine activist, took the set-back as yet another of life's challenges to be met and overcome. In 2000, she married former Beatle Paul McCartney and continues to lobby on behalf of the physically handicapped, especially those touhced by war.

Marlee Matlin
I'll Scream Later by Marlee Matlin with Betsy Sharkey. Simon, 2009.
At 18 months of age she lost her hearing. At 21 she won the Academy Award for Best Actress (Children of a Lesser God). Marlee Matlin candidly relates the highs and lows of her personal & professional life.

Kyle Maynard
No Excuses: The True Story of a Congenital Amputee who Became a Champion in Wrestling & in Life by Klye Maynard. Regnery, 2009.
Born without arms or legs below his elbows and knees, Kyle Maynard was remarkably able to achieve his life's goals thanks to the family who supported him, the coach who trained him, and the faith that strengthened him to face the toughest fights.

Mary Tyler Moore
After All by Mary Tyler Moore, 1995.
Mary spares nothing as she recounts her traumatic childhood, two failed marriages, her own alcoholism, the tragic death of her son, her battle with diabetes, and her third, happy marriage to a cardiologist eighteen years her junior. Moving, Inspiring, and brutally frank, this story will touch a reader's heart and soul.

John Forbes Nash, Jr.
A Beautiful Mind: A Biography of John Forbes Nash, Jr., Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics, 1994 by Sylvia Nasar, 1998.
The true story of John Nash, the mathematical genius who was a legend by age thirty when he slipped into schizophrenic madness, and who -- thanks to the selflessness of a woman, and the loyalty of the mathematics community -- emerged after decades of ghost-like existence, to win a Nobel Prize and world acclaim. The inspiration for a major motion picture of the same name, this award-winning biography is a drama about the mystery of the human mind, triumph over incredible adversity, and the healing power of love.

Jerri Nielsen
Icebound: A Doctor' s Incredible Battle for Survival at the South Pole by Jerri Nielsen with Maryanne Vollers, 2001.
In 1999, at the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station in Antartica, Dr. Jerri Nielsen discovered a lump in her breast. With help from U. S. doctors via e-mail, she performed her own biopsy, began chemotherapy, and waited for rescue. Both her experience and her philosophy make truly amazing reading.

Hirotada Ototake
No One's Perfect by Hirotada Ototake, 2000.
Born without arms or legs into a Japanese society that has traditionally shielded the disabled from public view, Hirotada Ototake tackles life with courage, energy, and a firm belief that there are some things only a disabled person can do!

Lewis B. Puller, Jr.
Fortunate Son: The Autobiography of Lewis B. Puller, Jr. by Lewis B. Puller, Jr.,1991.
Son of a famous Wourld War II Marine commander, Lewis proudly followed in his father's footsteps. However, while serving in Vietnam, Puller lost both legs and one hand. Following his return home, Puller became an alcoholic but, after pulling himself out of his own personal Hell, wrote this searingly graphic autobiography which won a Pulitzer Prize in 1992. However, sadly, two years after his greatest triumph, Lewis B. Puller, Jr. committed suicide.

Aron Ralston
Between a Rock and a Hard Place by Aron Ralston. Atria, 2004.
Ralston gives a harrowing account of his six days trapped in one of the most remote spots in America--pinned between a boulder and a canyon wall--and how he found the courage to cut off his arm to save his life.

Christopher Reeve
Still Me by Christopher Reeve, 1998.
In 1995, Christopher Reeve was thrown from a horse, landing on his head and breaking his neck. His consequential paralysis has led Reeve to become a public figure of the first rank. Since his accident, he has directed his first film, started the Christopher Reeve Foundation to fund spinal-cord-repair research, lobbied Congress, and crisscrossed the country on speaking engagements. This book also explains the tantalizing, but quite real, possibility that Reeve (and a quarter-million other paralyzed people, plus 49 million disabled Americans) may get back on their feet! Read also: Nothing is Impossible: Relfections on a New Life, by Christopher Reeve (RH, 2002).

Sarah Reinertsen
In a Single Bound: Losing My Leg, Finding Myself & Training for Life by Sarah Reinertsen, with Alan Goldscher. GPPS, 2009.
Born with a congenital birth defect, Long Island native Reinertsen had her leg amputated when she was 7 tears old. At the age of 30, she became the first female leg-amputee to complete the Ironman World Championship in Hawaii. Her memoir is a gripping story inner strength and perserverance.

Scott Rigsby
Unthinkable by Scott Rigsby & Jenna Glatzer. Tyndale, 2009.
After losing both of his legs in a car accident at age 18, Scott Rigsby battled his way back from depression and addiction to become the first double-leg amputee ever to cross the finish line in the grueling Ironman Triathlon.

John Elder Robison
Look Me in the Eye: My Life with Asberger's by John Elder Robison. Crown, 2007.
With humanity & humor Robison describes his struggle to live a "normal" life, his diagnosis at the age of 40 with Asperger's (a form of autism), and the dramatic changes that have occurred since that diagnosis.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt
FDR: An Intimate History by David Miller, 1983.
In the summer of 1921, at the age of 39, Franklin Delano Roosevelt was sticken with poliomyelitis. Courageously, he fought to regain the use of his legs, particularly through swimming. He went on to become the only U.S. president elected to four terms, certainly proving that his disability was not only not a hindrance, but never an issue at all!

Marla Runyan
No Finish Line: My Life As I See It by Marla Runyan, with Sally Jenkins. GPPS, 2001.
In 2000, runner Marla Runyan placed 8th in the 1,5000m race at the Sydney Olympics--the highest placement ever by an American woman. What made her feat so remarkable was that she had been legally blind since childhood.

Harold Russell
The Best Years of My Life by Harold Russell with Dan Ferullo, 1981.
Having lost both of his hands in World War II, Harold Russell nevertheless went on to win two Oscars for his performance in the film The Best Years of Our Lives, was the national commander of AMVETS, was co-founder and president of the World Veterans Federation, played the piano and told jokes on stage and in nightclubs with Jackie Gleason and Vic Damone, and toured for B'nai B'rith with Bess Myerson.

Joe Simpson
Touching the Void: The True Story of One Man's Miraculous Survival by Joe Simpson. Perennial, 2004.
As Joe Simpson and his climbing partner, Simon Yates, reached the top of a 21,000-foot peak in the Andes, Simpson plunged off the vertical face of an ice ledge, breaking his leg. Unable to lower his friend to safety, Yates was finally forced to cut the rope to save his own life and spent the next 3 days consumed with guilt over the death of his friend. But miraculously had survived the fall and began a painful physical and spiritual journey towards rescue.

Josh Sundquist
Just Don't Fall: How I Grew Up, Conquered Illness, and Made It Down the Mountain by Josh Sundquist. Viking, 2010.
Sundquist did not allow the loss of a leg to cancer at a young age to keep from from persuing his dreams, including skiing. A truly beautiful, inspirational story about a little boy who fought back against nearly overwhelming adversity.

Josh Swiller
The Unheard: A Memoir of Deafness & Africa by Josh Swiller. Holt, 2007.
Deaf since a young age, Josh Swiller spent his formative years in frustrated limbo on the sidelines of the hearing world, encouraged unsuccessfully by his family to use lipreading and the strident approximations of hearing aids to blend in. Only when he worked as a Peace Corps volunteer for two years in a remote African village, a place where violence, disease, and poverty were a daily part of living, did he find a place he could call home.

Adam Taliaferro
Miracle in the Making: The Adam Taliaferro Story by Scott Brown and Sam Carchidi, 2001.
On September 23, 2000, Penn State freshman football player Adam Taliferro's athletic career came to a screeching halt when he tackled an opponent headfirst. Told he would never walk again, Adam set out to prove them all wrong. The devotion of Adam's family, the ongoing committment of the coaches, the dedication of the numerous doctors, physical therapists, trainers and rehabilitative nurses, and Adam's drive and hard work, made his miracle possible. On September 1, 2001, Adam led the Penn State Nittany Lions onto the field to begin their new season.

Mel Tillis
Stutterin' Boy by Mel Tillis with Walter Wager, 1984.
The life story of the beloved and celebrated performer and songwriter who has endured (and just about overcome) a speech impediment, a broken marriage, and a long and challenging climb up the ladder of public recognition.

Henri Toulouse-Lautrec
Toulouse-Lautrec: The Soul of Montmarte by Reinhold Heller, 1997.
Deprived of a "normal" life as a result of stunted growth, Henri Toulouse-Lautrec was a French aristocrat who observed life in the cabarets and cafes of Paris, producing art that endures today as the essence of 19th-century Paris.

Ronan Tynan
Halfway Home: My Life ‘Til Now by Ronan Tynan, 2002.
Born in Ireland in 1960, Ronan Tynan is a world-renowned Irish tenor. Able to walk only with the aid of prosthetic limbs, he is a horseman, an athlete, a doctor, a singer, and now a writer!

Patricia Van Tighem
The Bear's Embrace: A Story of Survival by Patricia Van Tighem, 2001.
In a society that values perfection, Patricia Van Tighem has had to conjure up extraordinary bravery. In 1983, while hiking, she and her husband were attacked by a grizzly. Her recounting of the attack, her injuries, her recovery and her outlook today, stand as an example of what
perseverance is all about.

Geerat Vermeij
Privileged Hands: A Scientific Life by Geerat Vermeij. W. H. Freeman, 1997.
A memoir by the great blind marine biologist & paleontologist who learned to use his extrasensory abilities to overcome both his handicap and prejudice.

Erik Weihenmayer
Touch the Top of the World: A Blind Man's Journey to Climb Farther than the Eye Can See by Erik Weihenmayer, 2000.
Erik Weihenmayer is a world-class athlete, skydiver, long distance biker, marathon runner, skier, mountaineer, and ice and rock climber. He is also, incidentally, blind. His life story of never "looking back" is a lesson in courage.

Heather Whitestone-McCallum
Listening with My Heart by Heather Whitestone-McCallum with Angela Elwell Hunt, 1997.
Miss America 1995 recounts the story of her inspiring life, beginning with a childhood fever that left her profoundly deaf. However, she built on her strengths and accepted her limitations in school, in community service, and in beauty pageants to become the first Miss America with a physical handicap.

Montel Williams
Climbing Higher by Montel Williams, with Lawrence Grobel. NAL, 2004.
After almost 20 years of ignoring the symptoms, the Emmy-winning talk-show host and former Naval Intelligence Officer, was told he had multiple sclerosis, the devastating, often disabling, sometimes fatal disease, which attacks the central nervous system . Determined not to be defeated by the condition, he overcame his feelings of denial and anger and determined to lead a vital and productive life.

Carnie Wilson
Gut Feelings: From Fear and Despair to Health and Hope by Carnie Wilson with Mick Kleber, 2001.
Eating disorders had always plagued Carnie Wilson, of the pop group Wilson Phillips. At 300 pounds, she faced disease and an early death. Opting for gastric bypass surgery, she cut her weight in half and renewed her outlook on life.


Originally selected by Joan Kepins, Reference Department
Updated by Lynne Kennedy

 


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