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Elijah's Cup: A Family's Journey into the Community and Culture of High-Functioning Autism and Asperger's Syndrome »

Book cover image of Elijah's Cup: A Family's Journey into the Community and Culture of High-Functioning Autism and Asperger's Syndrome by Valerie Paradiz

Authors: Valerie Paradiz
ISBN-13: 9781416567769, ISBN-10: 1416567763
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Date Published: June 2007
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Valerie Paradiz

Valerie Paradiz was born in Colorado and has lived and worked in Germany and Japan. For several years she has taught literature and writing at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson. She lives with her son in Woodstock, New York.

Book Synopsis

The two-year-old toddler Elijah Paradiz was diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome, a form of autism characterized by social awkwardness, a fixation with particular subjects, and literal-mindedness. Elijah's Cup, written by Elijah's mother, gives a groundbreaking insider's view of the beauty of minds hidden in the shadows of autism.

Publishers Weekly

This expressive and deeply felt memoir explores how the diagnosis of the author's son, Elijah, with Asperger's syndrome (a high-functioning autism) changed her life. As a young child, Elijah had delays in language and motor skills, and also suffered seizures. Paradiz, an assistant professor of German studies at Bard College, details the subsequent dissolution of her marriage (although she and her ex-husband are now friends) and her own depression, events triggered by the problems of coping with Elijah's needs. After Paradiz hired a babysitter with Asperger's syndrome and read several accounts written by people diagnosed as autistic, she understood that her son was a visual rather than a verbal thinker. (According to the author, Albert Einstein and Andy Warhol both had Asperger's syndrome.) This realization led her to provide Elijah with the repetitive activities he needed to enjoy his life. She describes their time together at Autreat, a camp for autistics that emphasizes self-advocacy, an idea that has been rejected by more traditional parents and teachers, who believe that autistics cannot know their needs. This is a moving personal story that highlights a new way of thinking about people diagnosed as autistic. (Apr.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Table of Contents

Prefaceix
Chapter 1Elijah's Cup1
Chapter 2The Gift of Loss16
Chapter 3Perfect Strangers30
Chapter 4The Coincidence of Sharron Loree44
Chapter 5Nietzsche in the Bathtub59
Chapter 6My Father Was a Yakker77
Chapter 7Echolalia Fun Fun Fun98
Chapter 8Balloon Days110
Chapter 9Cartoons Don't Get Hurt130
Chapter 10Life Under Glass153
Chapter 11Playground Comedian175
Chapter 12Cracking Code201
Web Sites by and for Autistic People and for Autistic Advocacy220
Notes221
Acknowledgments232
Index236

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