Milton Public Library

I know my way, memoir : always remember to color the sky blue, Theresa Marafito, with Linda Odubayo Thompson ; editor: Pedro Odubayo Thompson, CCE, CTP

Label
I know my way, memoir : always remember to color the sky blue, Theresa Marafito, with Linda Odubayo Thompson ; editor: Pedro Odubayo Thompson, CCE, CTP
Language
eng
resource.accompanyingMatter
technical information on music
Form of composition
not applicable
Format of music
not applicable
Literary text for sound recordings
other
Main title
I know my way
Medium
electronic resource
Responsibility statement
Theresa Marafito, with Linda Odubayo Thompson ; editor: Pedro Odubayo Thompson, CCE, CTP
Sub title
memoir : always remember to color the sky blue
Summary
Who was Theresa Marafito? Theresa Marafito, daughter of Irish immigrant parents, was born in 1933 in New York City, blind in one eye with partial vision in the other. She was a precocious child who wanted to appear "normal" to her peers and family, regardless of her disability. Her game was to be independent, not dependent and would rarely ask for help. At nineteen she graduated magna cum laude with two master's degrees. Theresa and her husband Jerry, who was also visually impaired, would build a house on a shoestring budget and had two daughters, one who was also born visually impaired. Despite the laughter and happiness that was ever present in their home and business serving the public, Theresa's marriage was strong enough to endure one operation after another in a desperate attempt to keep her from becoming totally blind, plus the horror of watching her infant daughter's agony of being put under the knife. In late 1986, Theresa's perfect world came to a crashing halt when her soul mate Jerry lost his life to cancer. She was so devastated that she poured her heart out on an old manual typewriter trying to capture all of her precious memories. It was after her very tragic death in 2008 that the notes were found and became the starting point of this memoir. Linda, as daughter and Copywriter for several years, knew it would be a great pleasure to capture the essence of her mother's life in this memoir, and help the sighted world to have a better picture of a typical family model with the difficulties of living with visually impaired members. She was up to the task of explaining the level of emotion needed to convey the tension at every turn because she is now almost blind herself, and lost her first husband to cancer as well. Linda Odubayo Thompson
Target audience
adult
Transposition and arrangement
not applicable
Classification
Narrator