PRO CONNECT
Mary Pieroni Harper's parents never saw their child. They never saw each other. Both were completely blind, yet her father, Mario, became a lawyer and Judge, while her mother, Jane, ran the household and raised four children without outside help. In this moving biography /memoir, The Sound of Her Voice: My Blind Parents’ Story, Harper documents her parents' remarkable lives as they overcome constant challenges in their quest to live normal lives.
Born in Muncie, Indiana, she graduated from the University of Virginia and later earned her Master’s in Social Work from the University of Houston. Upon graduation, she worked as a psychotherapist with an Employee Assistance Program company, providing counseling and referrals for troubled families.
Perhaps as a legacy from helping her parents with everything from reading their mail to them to inspecting their clothing for spots, she has always been interested in helping others. Harper volunteered with the Fibromyalgia Association of Houston after being diagnosed with fibromyalgia in 1992 and served in leadership capacities, including newsletter editor of The Fibromyalgia Connection, and as president for fifteen years.
Harper lives in Houston, TX with her rescue cat, Lily, a mischievous but blind tuxedo cat who was especially comforting after Harper's husband, Jeff, passed away in 2012. She has two adult children and two incredibly cute grandchildren.
“Harper offers an inspiring story that avoids becoming saccharine”
– Kirkus Reviews
A debut biography/memoir centers on a blind couple and their daughter.
In her book, Harper, a retired social worker, tells the story of her parents’ lives and her own journey. The first part is a biography of her father and mother, who grew up in the 1920s and came from very different family backgrounds but had in common being blind. The author chronicles their early childhoods and educations and their initial meeting at the Indiana School for the Blind. Harper then discusses their courtship and married life as well as her father Mario Pieroni’s career as a lawyer, judge, community leader, and early activist, advancing “the cause of blind people.” The second part looks at Harper’s own life as the youngest of four children along with her parents’ later years until their deaths. This portion is told in the first person and includes separate reminiscences (including by her father) and eulogies. Each chapter is numbered in Braille, and the volume features photographs relating to her parents’ admission to the Indiana School for the Blind. Harper offers an inspiring story that avoids becoming saccharine, which sometimes happens with biographies/memoirs. Although she is optimistic, she pulls no punches when describing the discrimination her parents—and the blind in general—faced during the historical period she covers. She also brings out the intersection of disabilities and gender—for example, Harper’s father was taught how to go out in the world independently but her mother, Jane Pieroni, was not. And when recounting her parents’ courtship and marriage, the author does not overly romanticize events—for instance, Jane clashed with her husband over his deference to his mother. While the book’s second half is a somewhat less engaging read, it skillfully shows how Harper’s parents’ extraordinary lives could also be simply ordinary.
A moving and believable family account.
Pub Date: Sept. 16, 2022
ISBN: 9798987042809
Page count: 360pp
Publisher: Lily Cat Books
Review Posted Online: Nov. 27, 2022
Day job
Retired
Hometown
Muncie, Indiana
Passion in life
Finding new homes for old stuff
Unexpected skill or talent
Asking questions and listening to the answers
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