W. Ross Macdonald School Library

Louis Braille : a touch of genius

Mellor, C. Michael.

Louis Braille : a touch of genius [contracted braille] / by C. Michael Mellor. - Boston, Mass. : National Braille Press, 2006. - 4 v. of contracted braille.

Contracted braille.

Includes bibliographical references (p. 129-130) and index.

Home -- Coupvray -- Valentin Haï¿œuy -- School life -- Braille code -- Teacher -- Music -- Dot-matrix printing -- Braille banned -- Global braille -- Epilogue.

Louis Braille: A Touch of Genius is a biography about the man who invented a means of reading and writing still used today in almost every country in the world, adapted to almost every known language from Albanian to Zulu. Born sighted, Louis Braille accidentally blinded himself at the age of 3. He was lucky enough to be sent to a school for blind children in Paris, one of the first in the world. There, at the age of sixteen, he worked tirelessly on a revolutionary system of finger reading that became braille. He was a talented musician, astute businessman, and genius inventor collaborating with another Frenchman to invent the first dot-matrix printer around 1840.

0939173727

2005029150


Braille, Louis, 1809-1852.


Blind teachers--France--Biography.

HV1624.B65 / M45 2006

686.282092 MEL