When Raymond Luczak was growing up deaf in a hearing Catholic family of nine children, his mother shared conflicting stories about having had a miscarriage after-or possibly around-the time he was conceived. As an elegy to his lost twin, this book asks: If he had a twin, just how different would his life have been?
When the author was growing up deaf in a hearing family of nine children, his mother shared conflicting stories about having had a miscarriage after--or around--the time he was conceived. As an elegy to his lost twin, this book asks: If he had a twin, just how different would his life have been?have been?