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What happens when love is no longer enough? Jane Bernstein thought that learning to accept her daughter's disabilities meant her struggles were over. But as Rachel grew up and needed more than a parent's devotion, both mother and daughter were confronted with formidable obstacles. Rachel in the World, which begins in Rachel's fifth year and ends when she turns twenty-two, tells of their barriers and successes with the same honesty and humor that made Loving Rachel, Bernstein's first memoir, a classic in its field. The linked accounts in part 1 center on family issues, social services, experiences with caregivers, and Rachel herself—difficult, charming, hard to fathom, eager for her own independence. The second part of the book chronicles Bernstein's attempt to find Rachel housing at a time when over 200,000 Americans with mental retardation were on waiting lists for residential services. As Rachel prepares to leave her mother's constant protection, Bernstein invites the reader to share the frustrations and unexpected pleasures of finding a place for her daughter, first in her family, and then in the world.
| Contents Preface Part I 1. Taking Rachel Swimming 2. Making Rachel big 3. Taking Care 4. On Regret 5. Rachel Flies Alone 6. At Seventeen 7. Rachel at Work 8. Talking Part II 9. Kishorit 10. The Fourth Visit 11. Love and Death 12. Lifesharing 13. At Anna's 14. Commencement 15. How It Happened 16. A Perfect Place Index |"Jane Bernstein's Rachel in the World is a remarkable book about tough love—about the many challenges of raising a child with special needs, and about the woeful inadequacy of terms like 'special needs.' It is a fearlessly honest book about disability and family life, in which children with disabilities are not heaven's special angels, and in which children with disabilities grow up to be adults with disabilities. It is a necessary book, in which parents of children with disabilities worry about the world of social services and group homes and uncomprehending strangers. And it is a bracing book that reminds us how tough a parent's love can be— and how the power of love can sustain us in even the toughest times."
—Michael Bérubé
"The battles and triumphs of motherhood are featured in Bernstein's compelling account of life with Rachel. The honesty is apparent, as is the love, the pain, the hope—always the hope."—Eva Feder Kittay, author of Love's Labor: Essays on Women, Equality, and Dependency
"Refreshingly unsentimental, wrenchingly candid sequel to the author's previous memoir about her developmentally challenged daughter, Loving Rachel (1988). . . .A bracing testimony—not at all self-flattering—to parental love and advocacy."—Kirkus, July 15, 2007
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Jane Bernstein, a professor of English and creative writing at Carnegie Mellon University, is the author of Loving Rachel: A Family's Journey from Grief, Bereft—A Sister's Story, and other books. For more, visit www.janebernstein.net.