From Publishers Weekly
Victims of the complex, much-misunderstood and professionally baffling disease of autism will find an eloquent voice in Australian-born Williams, one of its victorious survivors. After 25 years, this daughter of abusive parents, shunted from school to school, began to emerge from a private, protective, hallucinatory world in which she was inhabitated by multiple personalities. Here Williams recounts how she learned to communicate and live with others. Inspired by an empathetic therapist, and determined to "take herself apart and put herself back together," Williams resumed schooling, graduating from college with honors. While she will always be autistic, her moving memoir and clear analysis of the nature of her illness shows how she was able to transcend it at least partially. Photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
Author Williams, a high functioning autistic, wrote this incredible autobiography in an attempt to understand herself. In doing so, she lets us into her world. Debra Winger reads in a flat, disjointed style that captures Williams's personality. Although this is an abridgment, the producers have retained the heart of the book. The cardboard packaging will not withstand circulation; the set will need to be reboxed. Highly recommended. [For a review of the unabridged edition of Nobody Nowhere, see Audio Reviews, LJ 12/93.-Ed.]-Susan Hamburger, Pennsylvania State Univ., University Par.
--Susan Hamburger, Pennsylvania State Univ., University ParkCopyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.