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The Printer

Published
Oct 2003
Main Genre
General Fiction General Fiction
Rating
Pages
32

About This Book

"As a boy, my father learned to speak with his hands. As a man, he learned how to turn lead-type letters into words and sentences. My father loved being a printer."
Each day in 1940s New York a young boy watches as his father goes to work in the noisy newspaper printing factory. But the boy's father only feels the machines' loud pounding and rumbling as vibrations through the soles of his shoes. He is deaf. Although his father communicates with a few other deaf printers through his hands, he feels largely ignored by his hearing co-workers. But when a silent deadly fire erupts, it is up to the father to warn and save his coworkers, even when they cannot hear him over the printers.
Myron Uhlberg draws on his own experiences as the hearing son of deaf parents to create this dramatic, evocative story that reflects a respect for deaf culture and the unique gifts each individual possesses. Historical details are deftly rendered and brought to life in Henri Sørenson's extraordinary paintings that dramatize and illuminate the powerful text.

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Paperback

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Trade Paperback
Mar 2009 Peachtree ISBN 1561454834
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Hardcover

Hardcover edition cover
Hardcover
Oct 2003 Peachtree ISBN 1561452211
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