by QuinnBradlee (Author), JeffHimmelman (Contributor)
This articulate, frank, entertaining memoir of growing up with a profound developmental and learning disability-by the son of long-time Washington Post Executive Editor Ben Bradlee and bestselling author Sally Quinn - will inspire everyone who has or deals with learning differences.Quinn Bradlee was diagnosed with VCFS, a syndrome that affects 1 in 2000 individuals but which stealthily masks itself with 180 symptoms that range from scoliosis to susceptibility to schizophrenia. (VCFS is the result of a submicroscopic deletion of a tiny segment of DNA on the 22nd chromosome that happens randomly in an instant during recombination in sexual cell reproduction). A Different Life is a revealing portrait of growing up battling the physical, mental, and social challenges presented by a sometimes debilitating and almost always demanding disorder, and a poignant confessional of the experience of growing up with such limitations as the son of incredibly accomplished and famous parents.From detailing his cringe-worthy loss of sexual innocence, to delineating the difficulties he experiences reading social cues, Quinn opens a door into his world-one in which he constantly questions what, exactly, is normal. At turns funny and saddening, Bradlee's memoir is a poignant rumination on the loneliness of being different, and at the same time, the indisputable joy he experiences in life. A balanced portrait that is optimistic without being Polly-annish, A Different Life deftly plumbs the depths of living in a different sort of house. Both benefiting and complicating Quinn's experience are his parents': two larger than life figures who can make things happen for their son, but whose long shadows also threaten to occlude him.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 240
Edition: 1
Publisher: PublicAffairs,U.S.
Published: 07 May 2009
ISBN 10: 1586481894
ISBN 13: 9781586481896
Book Overview: A Different Life :
Barbara Kantrowitz, The Daily Beast , 3/31
Bradlee is, at times, funny, mordant, surprisingly perceptive and disturbingly naive.... it's clear that even enormous privilege did not protect him from the profound loneliness of being different.
Liz Smith, www.Wowowow.com, 3/31
You'll be hearing the name Quinn Bradlee a lot now that this son of Sally Quinn and Ben Bradlee of Washington media fame has finished A Different Life: Growing Up Learning Disabled and Other Adventures .
Kate Tuttle, Washington Post
Bradlee's book brings a bracing honesty to the tough stuff he's faced, and a sweet enthusiasm toward the things that make him happy, from surfing to his childhood dog. He doesn't sugarcoat how difficult difference can be, but there's no pity here, and no complaint.
ADDitutde Magazine
A rare peek into the beliefs, feelings, and experiences of this young man with differing abilities, who just wants what the rest of us want out of life--work that he enjoys and is good at, and reciprocal relationships with a partner, good friends, and a wider social network.
Barbara Kantrowitz, The Daily Beast, 3/31
Bradlee is, at times, funny, mordant, surprisingly perceptive and disturbingly naive.... it's clear that even enormous privilege did not protect him from the profound loneliness of being different.
Liz Smith, www.Wowowow.com, 3/31
You'll be hearing the name Quinn Bradlee a lot now that this son of Sally Quinn and Ben Bradlee of Washington media fame has finished A Different Life: Growing Up Learning Disabled and Other Adventures.