After the frantic reading of BookTubeAThon 2013 I don’t have many books to discuss for this week’s reading roundup. The first book I read was Switched at Birth by “Kathryn Kennish”. The quotes are around the author’s name as this book was written in the universe of ABC Family’s drama Switched at Birth about two families who discover their daughters were involved in a hospital mixup. This show has been my recent guilty pleasure when not reading. Other than the character drama the merging of two families causes, I’ve found it a fascinating insight into the world of the deaf – one of the young women concerned is deaf. Many of the scenes involve, or are wholly in, American Sign Language. The writing and acting on the show are of excellent quality, so perhaps my expectations of the novelisation were too high. I found the novel uninteresting and lacking the depth that comes across in the show. It was written from the point of view of the hearing mother and barely touched on one of the most interesting aspects of the book, her learning about the deaf language and culture. I would suggest you skip the book and watch the show,…
After the frantic reading of BookTubeAThon 2013 I don’t have many books to discuss for this week’s reading roundup. The first book I read was Switched at Birth by “Kathryn Kennish”. The quotes are around the author’s name as this book was written in the universe of ABC Family’s drama Switched at Birth about two families who discover their daughters were involved in a hospital mixup. This show has been my recent guilty pleasure when not reading. Other than the character drama the merging of two families causes, I’ve found it a fascinating insight into the world of the deaf – one of the young women concerned is deaf. Many of the scenes involve, or are wholly in, American Sign Language. The writing and acting on the show are of excellent quality, so perhaps my expectations of the novelisation were too high. I found the novel uninteresting and lacking the depth that comes across in the show. It was written from the point of view of the hearing mother and barely touched on one of the most interesting aspects of the book, her learning about the deaf language and culture. I would suggest you skip the book and watch the show,…