Selina Mills is a writer and journalist. Educated at Harvard and Cambridge Universities, she has worked for Reuters and written widely for magazines, reviewed books, including features for The Observer, The Times, The Financial Times, The Daily Telegraph and The Spectator. She was formerly Senior Producer for Radio 4's World at One and PM programmes and was awarded a Royal Society of Literature Jerwood Award for Non-Fiction in 2009.
Selina Mills crafts a compelling narrative that illuminates and animates the story of a community that has always existed but has been relegated to the margins and the shadows. Mills takes readers along on her personal journey as she comes to terms with her own blindness with candor and warmth. She shares her fears, her irritation, her rage, and yes, her joy, as her contemporary story resonates with the lives of famous and lesser known blind writers, musicians, inventors and leaders from the past and present. This book will help to reform the image of blindness from a tragedy that must be overcome to simply another facet of human diversity. * Georgina Kleege, University of California, Berkely, USA * What is it like to be blind-or nearly blind? In this enchanting, quirky memoir, Selina Mills leads us through her life among the curious, pitying, and well-wishing sighted. Anecdotes from myth, religion, literature, and medicine reveal the blind as devil, prophet, victim, genius, exhibit, disabled-and clown. The book's cheerful revelation is that the blind are 'ordinary', that darkness is not all dark. * Janet Todd * The metanarrative of blindness hangs over us all, invites us to identify as sighted or blind, and thus to follow numerous binary assumptions that pertain to everything from sexuality to epistemology. Life Unseen helps to disrupt the myths, tropes, and stereotypes of the metanarrative via the often under-rated power of memoire. As such, the book makes an important contribution to blindness studies. * David Bolt, Professor of Disability Studies and Interdisciplinarity at Liverpool Hope University * This is a wonderfully refreshing account of blindness. With a winning mix of wit and erudition, Mills cuts through the stereotypes and cliches of blindness to give us a funny, touching and memorable account of her quest to understand why blindness gets such a bad press. Part history, part memoir, Mills's writing takes us through an alternative history of blindness whilst reflecting with honesty and beauty on her personal journey into sight loss. A significant contribution to the field of critical blindness studies. * Hannah Thompson, Royal Holloway University of London, UK *