Outside Looking In
Autor Clare Smithen Limba Engleză Paperback – 27 feb 2022
Professor Tony Attwood, author of The Complete Guide to Asperger's Syndrome.
What if you were given a life-altering diagnosis at 57? One that meant you aren't who you thought you were? But one that explained everything?
These poems vibrate with intensity and curiosity about life, and because she came to this knowledge so late in life, many of Clare Smith's poems focus not so much on what it means to be autistic, but on what it means to be human.
Throughout her life, as she struggled to fit into a world that to her was utterly strange, she poured her hopes, her joys and at times her despair into words.
She trained as a journalist, taught to cut out all emotion from her reporting, but her private writing is different - she created poetry that spoke to her deepest needs. There, exposed in her writing, is her yearning to belong, her astonishment at the physical world, her knowledge - decades before the doctors confirmed it - that she is different.
She's spent a lifetime trying to make sense of her life - a journey that many of us, whether autistic or neurotypical, are on, and one in which we all face the same questions.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781398442290
ISBN-10: 1398442291
Pagini: 82
Ilustrații: 12
Dimensiuni: 233 x 156 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.13 kg
Editura: Austin MacAuley Publishers
ISBN-10: 1398442291
Pagini: 82
Ilustrații: 12
Dimensiuni: 233 x 156 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.13 kg
Editura: Austin MacAuley Publishers
Notă biografică
Clare Smith was diagnosed with autism at 57. Discovering she has Asperger's led her to re-examine her life through the lens of this most complex of disabilities.
She grew up in Northern Ireland during The Troubles and went on to work for the BBC, where she became an award-winning health correspondent while, with her husband, raising two daughters.
After some twenty-five years there she began lecturing in journalism, but switched to volunteering after her diagnosis.
She and her family moved to rural Norfolk. She lives quietly by the sea with her husband and two cats.
She grew up in Northern Ireland during The Troubles and went on to work for the BBC, where she became an award-winning health correspondent while, with her husband, raising two daughters.
After some twenty-five years there she began lecturing in journalism, but switched to volunteering after her diagnosis.
She and her family moved to rural Norfolk. She lives quietly by the sea with her husband and two cats.