Monday, October 29, 2007




Look Me In the Eye: My Life with Asperger's
By John Elder Robison


Several months ago I re-visited Augusten Burrough's website because he is a favorite author of mine and I was very anxious to see when his next book was to be published. You may have heard of his most popular book, Running with Scissors, where he describes his incredibly dysfunctional childhood, his parents, and briefly his brother who was diagnosed at 40 with Asperger Syndrome (AS). Much to my disappointment, Burrough's latest book is not scheduled to come out for quite some time, but I was THRILLED when I saw his post from April 2007 about his older brother, John Elder Robison, and his new book about his life with AS that was to be published in the fall of 2007!!

While on the road for book signings for Running with Scissors, Burroughs was shocked at the amount of people who wanted to know more about his brother and all of the people who also identified themselves as having Asperger Syndrome. Burroughs encouraged his brother to write a book about his life and experiences before his diagnosis and what receiving the diagnosis so late in life has meant for him. Robison takes a wonderfully honest and matter of fact look back at his past: what might have been different, what had no impact, and how he has grown as a person because of, as well as regardless of, his diagnosis.

Please see our complete description of his book, Look Me In the Eye, for more details.

You can also visit Robison's own blog at: http://jerobison.blogspot.com/.

There are also a couple of other interesting and insightful interviews with Robison featured on YouTube, one where he is interviewed briefly by his brother and another on Greater Boston .

1 comment:

John Robison said...

Thank you so much for including my book on your site. Have you thought about offering signed copies? Because you are an autism non profit, I'd be glad to sign your books and ship them down to you provided you provided me prepaid UPS waybills. That way, we'd both have something special to offer online supporters of NC Autism. Write me at john@johnrobison.com if you'd like to do that.

best wishes
John