Official Website
of
Ann Millett-Gallant
Artist & Author
of
Re-Membering
BOOKS
Re-Membering
Putting Mind and Body Back Together Following Traumatic Brain Injury
$12.99 Paperback
Re-Membering is a memoir about being congenitally physically disabled and experiencing traumatic brain injury. Millett-Gallant recounts her accident, recovery, and consequential discoveries by engaging multiple genres of writing. Each chapter is composed of: personal narrative, research on brain injury and art therapy, disability studies and other critical theory, information from medical records, and voices from other memoirs, as well as examples of her artwork. She underscores the vital roles of her family and friends, as well as art, in her recovery and provides hope and direction for others with brain injury, based upon one survivor’s frst-hand experiences.
Also Available at
Paperback ISBN: 978-0-692-77235-5 • LCCN: 2016915721
BIO033000: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / People with Disabilities
$2.99 Ebook
Coming Soon
E-book ISBN: 978-0-692-79988-8 • LCCN: 2016915721
BIO033000: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / People with Disabilities
ART GALLERY
Acrylic on Canvas, 11" x 14"
Acrylic on Canvas, 12" x 12"
Acrylic on Canvas, 11" x 14"
BIOGRAPHY
Ann Millett-Gallant is an art historian, disability studies scholar, and visual artist who specializes in painting and collage. She holds a PhD in art history from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and currently serves as a Senior Lecturer for the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
EVENTS
March 23, 2017
Author Event at Page 158 Books
Day 1: January 16, 2017
Alice Wong of the Disability Visibility Project
Day 2: January 17, 2017
Wisdom House Books Q&A
Day 3: January 18, 2017
Michelle Dean of the Center for Psyche & Arts
Day 4: January 19, 2017
Shelley Klammer of Expressive Art Workshops
Day 5: January 20, 2017
Girija Kaimal of Art Stories
MEDIA
“Millet-Gallant is a worthy follow-up to her heroine, Frida Kahlo, with her deep dive into the imaginal realm through which she creates a new relationship with her rapidly shifting experience of life following her injury. It has been truly inspiring to track her courageous and unflinching march into the painful territories of loss, fear, and guilt, uninterrupted by self-pity or doubt and brimming with sensitive self-awareness.”
—Gloria Mahin of the Expressive Therapist blog
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For any media inquiries, please contact
Clara Jackson at Wisdom House Books