About the Author:
PETER KAVANAGH is a veteran of Canadian media, having worked for 25 years at the CBC in television and radio with programs such as The Journal, Morningside, The Sunday Edition and Ideas, as well as publishing in The Globe and Mail, Toronto Star, the National Post and numerous publications in the United States and Europe. He lives with his wife, Debi Goodwin, in Ontario.
Review:
“Peter Kavanagh’s ordeal is a story about endurance and perseverance—how a devastating disability became the motivation for growth—spiritual, intellectual and even physical. And how the victim of a terrible disease is able to avoid the debilitating handicap of victimhood through raw determination and enduring hopefulness.” —Linden MacIntyre, author of Punishment
“If you totted up the pain, the surgeries, the dashed hopes and unexpected setbacks Peter Kavanagh details in this wonderfully readable memoir, you might brace yourself for a depressing experience. Quite the contrary: Kavanagh’s buoyant, curious spirit is an inspiration. Filled with fascinating medical and social history, this is a deft portrait of a man who never stopped learning about himself and what it takes to walk well.” —Katherine Ashenburg, author of The Dirt on Clean
“Most people never remember how they first learned to walk. But Peter Kavanagh, who learned and kept learning, remembers everything. In this honest and original memoir, Kavanagh provides a heartfelt reminder that it’s the journey, not the destination, that offers life’s best lessons. His is a remarkable story, rich with insights about history, medicine, and the endurance of the human spirit.” —Carolyn Abraham, author of The Juggler’s Children
“Kavanagh knows how to write both evocatively and concisely. . . . [H]e luminously creates the town of Deep River and the personalities of his parents. . . . He knows exactly how to identify and encapsulate the information that a common reader wants and needs to know, in a straightforward language and using imagery that makes sense rather than impresses with creativity.” —James Roots, The Literary Review of Canada
“[A] remarkable memoir.” —Jamie Portman, The StarPhoenix (Saskatoon)
“The Man Who Learned to Walk Three Times is a well-written look at how walking is not something we’re born knowing how to do. Instead, Kavanagh notes it’s something precious and important, and the freedom it gives should be valued and appreciated throughout our lives.” —Julie Kentner, Winnipeg Free Press
“In his memoir, The Man Who Learned to Walk Three Times, the former CBC producer recounts, with grace, precision and a strong dose of candour, his life-long struggle to put one foot in front of another.” —Zsuzsi Gartner, The Globe and Mail
“It offers insights into the world of the chronically ill child, the ways we learn and lose and relearn skills, and the ramifications of being considered ‘imperfect.’. . . For a private, intellectual man who has spent long stretches of time isolated in lonely hospital rooms, this married father of a grown daughter has opened himself up here in ways that you suspect don’t come easily, which makes his thoughtful observations seem all the more valuable. In The Man Who Learned to Walk Three Times, it’s clear Kavanagh has learned much more than how to walk.” —Marcia Kaye, Toronto Star
“Kavanagh’s unmaudlin, matter-of-fact account keeps us interested in his battle of wills with his malady from beginning to (hopeful) end.” —John Arkelian, Artsforum.ca
“In The Man Who Learned to Walk Three Times, Peter Kavanagh doesn’t just tell us his own fascinating story: He makes the rest of us appreciate the magic of that thing we do unthinkingly with our own two legs.” —Jonathan Kay, Editor-in-Chief of The Walrus
“Although Kavanagh’s story is shaped by physical challenges, his book is not a medical case study. His story is one of hardship, resilience, and hope.” —Jacqueline Cormier, Connections (St. Thomas University)
[An] inspirational tale.” —Penny Coles, Niagara Advance
“Kavanagh’s unmaudlin, matter-of-fact account keeps us interested in the battle of will he wages against his malady from beginning to end.” —John Arkelian, The Catholic Register
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