After her undergraduate degree, Alexander taught third-grade students in Southern California,[5] when a rare disease caused blood vessels in her retina to break, which eventually led to total blindness.[6] She told Contemporary Authors, "I was unhappy to leave that last year [of my teaching], when my visual difficulties began. I entered an excellent training program in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania for newly blinded adults. For a year afterward, I taught at the Greater Pittsburgh Guild for the Blind."[4]
Alexander embarked on a writing career in children's fiction with the publication of her first book, Mom Can't See Me (1990), in which Alexander depicts a loving family that has learned to cope with having a blind parent. She has published eight titles as of 2008,[7] including two memoirs, Taking Hold (1994) and On My Own (1997),[8][9] and a young readers' biography of Laura Bridgman.[10]
Sally Hobart married Bob Alexander, an English professor. They have two children and live in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh.[11] In recent years, she has developed hearing loss, and wears hearing aids.[7] "Although I don't minimize the challenges of my deaf-blindness," she wrote in 2010, "I do believe that were I to lose all my hearing, I would still find meaning and joy in reading and writing books."[12]
Books
Mom Can't See Me, children's semi-autobiographical (New York: Macmillan, 1990).[13]
Sarah's Surprise, fiction (New York: Macmillan, 1990).[14]
Mom's Best Friend, children's semi-autobiographical (New York: Macmillan, 1992).[15]
Maggie's Whopper, fiction (New York: Macmillan, 1992).[16]
Taking Hold: My Journey into Blindness , nonfiction autobiographical (New York: Macmillan, 1994).[9]
On My Own: The Journey Continues, nonfiction autobiographical (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1997).[17]
Do You Remember the Color Blue? And Other Questions Kids Ask about Blindness, nonfiction (New York: Viking, 2000).[18]
She Touched the World: Laura Bridgman, Deaf-Blind Pioneer, (co-author with Robert Alexander) nonfiction (New York: Clarion Books, 2008).[10]
^Alexander, Sally Hobart. (2000). Do you remember the color blue? : and other questions kids ask about blindness. New York: Viking. ISBN0-670-88043-4. OCLC41488721.