Mean Little Deaf Queer: A Memoir, Terry Galloway
Terry Galloway is, despite her title, a complete charmer. Her memoir is like an indie movie that has everyone in stitches and simultaneously weeping at Sundance.
Terry grew up in the 1950s. Her mother had been given an experimental antibiotic while pregnant, which had adverse effects on her fetal nervous system. When Terry was nine, she began to lose her hearing. But being deaf wasn't going to stop Terry from having her big personality! Even though she was named the "child freak" of her town and faced the worst kind of prejudice, she managed to get back at everyone by faking her own drowning at summer camp. Now that takes balls.
I listened to Terry's coming out, mental breakdowns, all the colorful characters in her life, and kept thinking, "What's next?" She never disappointed.
Narrated by Elizabeth Hess.
--Aretha Bright