5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Two Generations, August 19, 2003
This is the true story based on the author's family and their struggles with Autism. It is about being a sibling to an older brother and what life was like in his household. His father came and went and his Mother never pursued a diagnosis for his brother.
There are some very touching moments in the story about the author's two sisters and how they left the house and their marriages and how the older brother was perceived in the family unit.
Charles goes off to college and has a hard time leaving his brother behind with his mother. At this point in time there is no diagnosis for his brother. They did not send him to school. I believe this was around the 1950s. His brother is much older than he and Charles is more of a father figure to him.
Charles gets married and then has a son. It is around this time that he begins noticing similarities between his brother and his son. Once his son receives the diagnosis of Autism he approaches his Mother to have his brother tested.
learned many lessons from his experiences. In this book he explains how people with autism cannot understand the words "before" and "after". The sequence that allows you to understand cause and effect. The sense of time can be radically impaired or absent. Other words we take for granted and not understood are then, sometime, did, will and so on. Autistic people have a hard time using a calendar and the concept of time as well as a lack in judgment.
One of the stories Charles retold is how when his son was about the age of thirteen and in a residential home, he broke either a window or a mirror. At the hospital, he asked Doctors and nurses not to give signs of sympathy or offer any kindness that an autistic person might misinterpret as reinforcement for their actions.
Instead he wanted to reinforce the message that glass can hurt. He stated that this incident never happened again. As a mother to two autistic preschoolers I have read about this type of behavior and I wrote these notes down when reading the book. I cried for the author as well because I can understand how difficult that must have been for him.
The one question that is most difficult, in my opinion, is WHY, for an autistic person. They cannot comprehend this. The author gives some very good examples of how they got around using that word and still got an answer.
I am also the sibling of a sister who had a brain tumor in the early 70's and the similarities of the author's experience and mine are parallel. I found this book to be the best family account of living with autism.
This is a fantastic book for all people who are involved in disabilities as well as for parents or siblings or even an adult with a disability.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very easy to read., February 5, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Without Reason: A Family Copes With Two Generations of Autism (Paperback)
The author's brother and his son are both autistic, born 50 years apart. The comparing and contrasting of attitudes, teaching and therapies are very interesting. The hopes for his son and brother are very compelling. The examples he gives of the autistic person not understanding cause and effect are very clear.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The power of parents, June 16, 2003
By A Customer
A friend of the author lent me this book out of curiousity. I applaud Charlie for sharing such an honest and personal account: the '"embarrassment" of Sumner when he was growing up, the thought of killing himself and his son after discovering there was a problem, and then realizing that things can be different for his son. The memory I will carry away from this book is that of two devoted parents who took the initiative to learn all they could about their son's condition and became advocates for his care in a society that did not know how to address/treat autism. Of course, they encountered many frustrations, but never gave up. If parents were half as devoted to their children as Charlie and Sara, there would be a lot less troubled kids in the world today. I've seen Ted on public transportation in the city (before I knew who he was) and the first time I saw him, I did think he was odd with his insistent questioning to a person on the bus. Now that I realize his background and know who he is, I commend his parents once again, and Ted, of course.
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