Robert V. Hine


Robert Van Norden Hine Jr. was a memoirist, historical novelist, and history professor, who wrote a number of books. He is perhaps most famous for his 1993 memoir Second Sight, which recounts his experience of becoming totally blind at age 50 and then partially recovering his sight 15 years later with the benefit of a high-risk operation.
He grew up in Beverly Hills, where his father was a real estate developer. When he was in high school, Robert V. Hine developed severe juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. He was hospitalized for six weeks to undergo intensive therapy, but managed to graduate on schedule from high school. He started college at the University of California, Los Angeles, but withdrew after he began to have hemorrhages in both eyes. The hemorrhages were a result of uveitis caused by his rheumatoid arthritis. As he grew older, the uveitis made removal of his cataracts too risky. He earned a bachelor's degree in 1948 from Pomona College and a Ph.D. in history in 1952 from Yale University. In 1949, as a graduate student, he married Shirley McChord, whom he had met when they were students at UCLA. As his eyesight deteriorated she became his reader and research assistant. After graduating from Yale he published in 1953 his first book and spent a year as a fellow at the Huntington Library in San Marino, California. From 1954 to 1990 he was a faculty member of the history department of the University of California, Irvine. There he was the chair of the department from 1962 to 1967. He was a Guggenheim Fellow for the academic years 1957–1958 and 1967–1968.
Upon his death in 2015 he was survived by a daughter and a grandson.

Selected publications