A critic examines classic fairy tales and their underlying ableism while offering new ways to celebrate the beauty and value of all bodies.
What The Reviewers Say
Ron Charles,
The Washington Post
A brilliant young critic.
Peter Dabbene,
Foreword Reviews
Disfigured is a fascinating exploration of how disabilities are treated within fairy tales and of how those treatments help to shape social attitudes and perceptions. Part literary examination, part cultural critique, and part memoir, Disfigured is exceptional.
Stacey May Fowles,
Quill & Quire (CAN)
This meticulously researched book finds its greatest strength in Leduc’s own generous account of being a disabled person (Leduc prefers to use identity-first language) in a world propped up by fairy-tale thinking.
Sara Shreve,
Library Journal
... a remarkable exploration into the ways disability has been portrayed in fairy tales and, consequently, how those portrayals have shaped society’s treatment of the disabled.