Little Rock Rocks
October 4, 2008 • 12 Comments • Posted in blindness, book tour, travel, Uncategorized
A wonderful thing happened after the presentation Hanni and I gave at the William J. Clinton Presidential Library, yesterday.
Actually, a lot of wonderful things have been happening since Hanni and I arrived in Little Rock on Wednesday. We’re here thanks to a grant put together by two powerhouse women: Bronwyn Palmer works with the State of Arkansas Post-school Outcome Intervention for Special Education, and Kathleen Pate is the Education Specialist at the Clinton Presidential Library and Museum.
Since we arrived Wednesday night, Hanni and I have been talking to groups of teachers, parents and schoolkids. Our biggest event was yesterday, when the kids from the Arkansas School for the Blind paired up with the kids from Martin Luther King, Jr. Elementary School to hear my presentation at the Clinton Library. After my talk, the kids lined up to get a copy of Safe & Sound. Bronwyn had ordered copies of Safe & Sound in print/Braille, too, from Seedlings for the kids from Arkansas School for the Blind. In the print/Braille version, Braille words appear directly under the printed words, and there are no illustrations. It was a thrill to sign my name in Braille for those kids. Two of them – Taylor and Chevy – sat at my side for a while, helping me rubber stamp Hanni’s paw into each copy.
There were almost 250 kids there from MLK, Jr. Elementary, and towards the end of the signing, Bronwyn realized we were running out of print copies. She did have a number of Braille copies left, though, so she made an announcement. “Everyone left in line can make a decision – you can have a print copy with pictures, or a print copy with Braille.”
Wow. This was a tough one. The sighted kids knew the illustrations are pretty, but they’d seen the kids from the School for the Blind reading Braille, and they thought that was cool. I sensed these kids standing on one leg, then on the other, trying to decide. And then, one by one, the Braille copies were slapped on the table for me to sign. Now, not every sighted kid towards the end of the line chose Braille, but many, many of them did.
It was awesome.
I’d write more but have to get ready now for an outdoor festival to culminate our time in Little Rock. I really like it here. Hanni does, too. Little Rock rocks!