'2005-spring'
entry by...sleepyjenn updated...Oct 10, '06 spoilers...n/a
i'm not saying it's not good. i'm just saying i couldn't finish it. this autistic child behaved nothing like the autistic children i worked with in my caretaker days, but i've heard the exact opposite from other people with the same background. so who knows? just couldn't get into it.
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'[entry title]'
entry by...Retrogirl updated...May 09, '07 spoilers...n/a
Fifteen-year-old Christopher John Francis Boone is mathematically gifted and socially hopeless, raised in a working-class home by parents who can barely cope with their child's quirks. He takes everything that he sees (or is told) at face value, and is unable to sort out the strange behavior of his elders and peers.
Late one night, Christopher comes across his neighbor's poodle, Wellington, impaled on a garden fork. Wellington's owner finds him cradling her dead dog in his arms, and has him arrested. After spending a night in jail, Christopher resolves--against the objection of his father and neighbors--to discover just who has murdered Wellington. He is encouraged by Siobhan, a social worker at his school, to write a book about his investigations, and the result--quirkily illustrated, with each chapter given its own prime number--is The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time.
I actually thought this novel was just ok, it was a good read but I felt it was a little slow at times.
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'[entry title]'
entry by...sorcha updated...Jun 08, '08 spoilers...n/a
"And it means that sometimes things are so complicated that it is impossible to predict what they are going to do next, but they are only obeying really simple rules. And it means that sometimes a whole population of frogs, or worms, or people, can die for no reason whatsoever, just because that is the way the numbers work."
A really simple novel, yet surprisingly touching and brilliantly written. I cannot comment on how accurate a description of autism it is, but I loved that the main character, Christopher, makes life and existence so logical and simple. It's hard to argue with his reasonings!
Should be on everyone's TO READ list!
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'[entry title]'
entry by...mouse_mouse updated...Mar 20, '07 spoilers...n/a
Haddon's mystery novel about an autistic teen who attempts to solve the mystery of a dead neighbor's dog funny and genuine. An original voice imbued with emotion and honesty. As someone with a brother who was diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome (the type of autism Haddon's character has) at an early age, the book hit home in more ways than one.
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'[entry title]'
entry by...MarianV updated...Jun 21, '07 spoilers...n/a
The ingredients of a family nightmare are turned into comedy in this would-be detective story. It is told from the point-of-view of an autistic 15 year old & his take on the people who surround him & the events of his daily life as he tries to solve a mystery & uncovers the unexpected.
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'One of our Book Club selections'
entry by...pcox updated...Apr 28, '07 spoilers...none
With the subject matter: animal cruelty, autism, unfaithfulness, parental alienation, teen angst and more ....this story could have been exploitive, depressing, and troubling. Instead, I found it warm, funny, instructive, and very touching. Well done!
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'[entry title]'
entry by...peggan updated...Jan 26, '08 spoilers...none
Darkly funny and surprisingly moving book. Our unlikely narrator is Christopher, a boy with Asperger's, a form of autism. This book is a credible mystery story that can stand up proud; but as much as anything, it was an exercise in seeing the world through the eyes of a boy who's brain works so differently than yours or mine. Haddon never cheats with the 1st-person narrative, and so there's this deliciously frustrating sense that if we were just there in person, we would be able to look around the corner and recognize what Christopher is incapable of recognizing. We could see what was coming and somehow protect Christopher from it. But Christopher cannot bend his mind this way, and so we are trapped in the back seat with him at the wheel. This allows the story to surprise us at every twist and turn, and break our hearts a little along the way.
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'What was all the fuss?'
entry by...elishapisha updated...May 26, '08 spoilers...n/a
Okay, so this book is a good example of why I tend not to read popular books.
Yes, writing from the viewpoint of an autistic child was interesting - for about the first 30 pages. After that it just felt like a children's book. The story itself is not very powerful, it's really the writing style. I think the same effect of "Oh, wow, that's how autistic people see the world?" could have been accomplished in a short story. Maybe that sounds callous, but I really don't see the need for the entire book.
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'[entry title]'
entry by...ktdoerksen updated...Jan 08, '09 spoilers...n/a
Loved the book...view from the autistic boy's eyes is amazing and sad at the same time
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'Someone I'd love to meet'
entry by...EricaSJ updated...Dec 27, '07 spoilers...n/a
Didn't know til I started the book that he's Augusten Burroughs' brother; makes me really want to read Running with Scissors, and soon.
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