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Discussion Guide

An Eye for an I

By James Francisco Bonilla

The personal story of a blind Puerto Rican boy in New York who transcends a harrowing childhood to become a lifelong advocate for social justice

"Jovencito, it's going to be lonely being different and yet strong in this world," James Francisco Bonilla's grandmother told him when he was ten. He had come home after defending himself against a bully who had threatened him with violence, making it clear that he didn't care that James was blind. But despite the isolation James felt in childhood, he would come to commit his life to leveraging his differences and strengths toward a collective fight for justice. James's memoir, An Eye for an I, is an inspiring account of how he found a path through his own suffering to make a difference for others.

Born with congenital cataracts, James had limited vision in his right eye and none in his left. At age nine, after a classmate hurled a horseshoe at his face in a racially motivated assault, James's right eye was injured and he became legally blind. At home, too, he feared physical violence, experiencing the unpredictable outbursts of a single mother suffering from severe mental illness. Throughout his youth as a Puerto Rican New Yorker, James was continually failed by educational systems that exposed him to one abuse after another. Searching for relief and inspiration, he discovered an unexpected solace in the natural world, spiritual encounters with Mother Earth that led him toward both personal healing and advocacy.

At nineteen, a breakthrough in medical technology restored the sight in his right eye, and James recognized his unique perspective on the struggles of the disabled and marginalized in American life--and his intense will to make a difference. He seeks to understand generational trauma, and in documenting his growth--physically, mentally, and spiritually--his memoir exemplifies the introspection necessary to participate in truly equitable and effective movement building. An Eye for an I presents both James and his aggressors with refreshing nuance and humility, inviting readers to empathize, be inspired, and consider their own potential to be of service in a broken, yet beautiful, world.

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These discussion questions were provided by the publisher, University of Minnesota Press.

Book club questions for An Eye for an I by James Francisco Bonilla

Use these discussion questions to guide your next book club meeting.

What connections do you see between disability, bigotry, and mental illness that you hadn’t seen before?

James Bonilla touches on the topic of invisibility in the chapter “But You Don’t Look…?” Have you ever experienced someone telling you that you didn’t look how they expected?

How did you feel about James wrestling with forgiving his mom and where he landed on the dilemma?

James writes that “blindness didn’t just happen to him, it also happened for him.” What do you think he meant by that? Can the same be said about racism and/or mental illness?

What did you learn about the Puerto Rican experience, as James describes it, that you didn’t know before?

James’s contact with so-called helping institutions like the state, public and private schools, and “professionals” was mixed. How did you see him being supported? Where was he hindered?

In illustrating how society at times let him down, James says, “I want people to grasp that I was more disabled by my environment and social discrimination by others than by my physical blindness.” Does this change your perspective on physical disabilities, especially in the way society treats people with them?

James speaks to the idea that blindness gave him special entry into a world not made privy to the sighted. What do you think he is referring to? What might the sighted miss because they can see?

James raises the idea of blind spots not being an isolated phenomenon to the blind but one the sighted experience as well. After reading, are there blind spots you’ve become aware of in your own life?

What role did Nature play in James’s healing? What experiences have you had in Nature that have been important for you?

What was something that stuck with you long after you read the last line?

An Eye for an I Book Club Questions PDF

Click here for a printable PDF of the An Eye for an I discussion questions