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Robert V. Hine
Second Sight
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$26.95, £15.95 paperback
978-0-520-20891-9
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203 pages,
August 1993, Available worldwide
Categories: Autobiographies & Biographies; Autobiography; Health & Medicine; History

Free online edition (eScholarship)--available only to University of California faculty, staff, and students (List of public titles)
"Jauntily literate and broadly allusive, Mr. Hine is part of a disappearing breed of American academic. His resourcefulness and lack of vanity are also the virtues of many a novel's hero, and his display of them prepares readers of his book to rejoice at its crucial plot twist: the restoration of his sight. . . . Hine is shy about the word, but he seems to know he is dealing with a miracle. Contemplating the rush of light he writes about, readers may feel like the shepherds of Judea, not only thrilled but sore afraid."—New York Times Book Review

"Uplifting ruminative memoir by a history professor who went blind in middle age and regained his sight 15 years later. . . . A pleasingly thoughtful, quietly courageous report from one who's lived his life both sighted and blind—but never it seems, with blinders."—Kirkus Reviews
"Second Sight has meaning for all of us, whether we see well or not well or not at all. . . . Warm subtle, percipient, with strong feelings lightly expressed."—August Frugé
He knew he was going blind. Yet he finished graduate school, became a history professor, and wrote books about the American West. Then, nearly fifty, Robert Hine lost his vision completely. Fifteen years later, a risky eye operation restored partial vision, returning Hine to the world of the sighted. "The trauma seemed instructive enough" for him to begin a journal.

That journal is the heart of Second Sight, a sensitively written account of Hine's journey into darkness and out again. The first parts are told simply, with little anguish. The emotion comes when sight returns; like a child he discovers the world anew—the intensity of colors, the sadness of faces grown older, the renewed excitement of sex and the body.

With the understanding and insights that come from living on both sides of the divide, Hine ponders the meaning of blindness. His search is enriched by a discourse with other blind writers, humorist James Thurber, novelist Eleanor Clark, poet Jorge Luis Borges, among others. With them he shares thoughts on the acceptance and advantages of blindness, resentment of the blind, the reluctance with sex, and the psychological depression that often follows the recovery of sight.

Hine's blindness was the altered state in which to learn and live, and his deliverance from blindness the spur to seek and share its lessons. What he found makes a moving story that embraces all of us—those who can see and those who cannot.
Robert V. Hine is Professor of History Emeritus of the University of California, Riverside, and Professor Recalled at the University of California, Irvine. Among his many books are Josiah Royce (1992), and California's Utopian Colonies (3rd reprint edition California, 1983).