Lucy's book is wonderful, playful, highly intelligent and utterly tell it like it is. Her book introduces the reader not only to the little known world of facilitated communication (through typing) but also to her relationship with her colorful quirky family and her life in Australia. Having met Lucy many times, I know she is as much an inspiration to people through this book as she is to those who meet her. [...]
My favorite autistic autobiography
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
This is currently my favorite autobiography by an autistic person. The reasons for this may be purely personal -- the author does a good job of portraying areas of autism that I don't see portrayed often. For instance, she describes sensory experiences that shift and fluctuate over time, the extent of which she does not entirely understand or notice until they start stabilizing a bit. The book also describes an emotional and physical reality I can relate to, including why the author is grouchy about certain things, what her body does in response to these things, and how her body reacts to her thinking in general. Its author seems like a slightly more amplified version of me autism-wise, but having both the language and the courage to describe things I could not. (This also makes me highly biased toward this book and less likely to be able to find fault with it even when I try, so keep the positive bias in mind.)The plot itself is a familiar one. An autistic person is born, goes to special education for awhile, learns to type with facilitated communication, starts going to regular high school, and eventually goes on to university and physically independent typing. The way it is told is both more well-rounded and more humorous than most similar accounts manage, and is occasionally punctuated with accounts by the author's sisters and mother, and quotes from other people the author has interacted with, including a correspondence with the Australian fiction author John Marsden.The author herself has a carefully cultivated dryly amusing tone to her writing -- and, in defiance of stereotype, she describes exactly why and how she cultivated it as she was learning to write. This defiance of stereotype, and her matter-of-fact admitting when she doesn't know something about autism, is another part of why I like the book so much. At one point, a teacher asks her why she's having trouble working with her. The author says, "I don't know. Even *I* don't fully understand autism." These sorts of admissions are rare in similar books.This book has helped me to learn how to describe what I did not know how to describe, like the shifts in sensory experience. Equally important, it showed me that it was *possible* to describe things I had been afraid to describe, like the author's feelings about school, her reactions to being told she wasn't really disabled or autistic, and so forth -- unlike most books that put everything in terms of autistic characteristics, the author of this book put many things in terms of emotions *added to* autistic ways of showing them (including showing affection by backing into someone). It also shows the discrepancy that can exist between how non-autistic people perceive autistic people, and what we are *actually* feeling and thinking.While I gave the book five stars, there are a few things I am uneasy about or don't like. Tony Attwood's foreword and afterword contain erroneous ideas about prior books (including that this is
An Autistic Life
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 22 years ago
This is the autobiography of Lucy Blackman, an amazing autisticwoman who has made remarkable progress in adjusting to theworld despite her autism. Facilitated communication and auditoryintegration therapy play major roles. What I found particularlyvaluable (but at times hard to understand) were the insightsshe gained into her own difficulties when she saw changes as aresult of these therapies and techniques. This book is hardto follow at times, but worth the effort for anyone trying tounderstand autism.
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