Christy Brown (born June 5, 1932, Dublin, Irish Free State [now in Ireland]—died September 7, 1981, Parbrook, Somerset, England) was an Irish writer who overcame virtually total paralysis to become a successful novelist and poet.
Brown was born with cerebral palsy, which left him unable to control any of his limbs except his left foot. His mother, who had 12 other children and refused to have him confined to an institution, taught him to read and, using his only viable limb, to write and eventually to type. In 1954 he published his highly successful autobiography, My Left Foot, and in 1970 the best-selling Down All the Days. Thanks to the devoted care of his mother and of his wife, Mary, whom he married in 1972, and to his own determination, his speech and muscular control improved. He published A Shadow on Summer in 1974 and Wild Grow the Lilies two years later. His last novel, A Promising Career, appeared posthumously in 1982. A film version of My Left Foot was released in 1989 and received two Academy Awards in 1990.