cover image LAUGHING ALLEGRA: Raising a Daughter with Learning Disabilities—A Mother's Story

LAUGHING ALLEGRA: Raising a Daughter with Learning Disabilities—A Mother's Story

Anne Ford, with John-Richard Thompson, foreword by Mel Levine. . Newmarket, $24.95 (237pp) ISBN 978-1-55704-564-5

This poignant, intimate portrait of the author's daughter and her constant battle with serious learning disabilities opens an often hidden world and illuminates the many ways learning disabilities shape the lives of entire families. While having the Ford family name has provided Allegra with some advantages (the author is Henry Ford's great-granddaughter), living with a learning disability can be extremely difficult for anyone so diagnosed, and often a proper diagnosis is itself very difficult to come by. As a deeply involved and caring mother and longtime chair of the National Center for Learning Disabilities, Ford has seen enormous changes in public understanding and has knowledge about these problems, but there is still much to learn, she says, and every case is unique. She incorporates invaluable information for parents just beginning this lifelong struggle, including "questions parents ask" and her own perspective on some of the hardest issues that will almost certainly arise, in the early years and beyond, about persevering in the search for appropriate schooling, encouraging interpersonal relationships, helping the child establish an independent life when finances are difficult to grasp and employment is hard to maintain, and preparing the child for life when the parents are gone. But above all, this is a personal journey, depicting Allegra's triumphs (she is now 30) and the author's strength throughout years of pain and difficulty. Agent, Phyllis Wender. (May 5)

Forecast:The author's credibility and a foreword by bestselling author Levine (A Mind at a Time) will make this popular among parents of the 2.9 million American students currently receiving special education for learning disabilities.