

TBR Pile Review: The Ruthless Lady’s Guide To Wizardry, by C.M.TBR Audiobook Review: Monstrous Regiment, by Terry Pratchett.The resources at the end might be useful for a reader who isn’t autistic.Īutistic people are quite capable of telling their own stories, whether in words, pictures or gestures, and this book shares some of them.įollow me on Twitter My Tweets Recent Posts I love the cover, it’s not overwhelming or too bright. This is a weighty little book, nice texture to the pages, right size for carrying around. The only thing they had in common was a diagnosis of autism/Asperger’s Syndrome/ASC/ASC/whatever we’re being labelled as these days. People from many places and with different support needs. I laughed, I cried, a lot, I enjoyed the stories and the art work, it was so refreshing to read other peoples’ experiences of life and see my own reflected back. But in the last few days I’ve managed to get up to date with the blog tours for March and have some breathing room so I read Stim. I did, and I’ve been meaning to read it for a while, but blog tours and my job got in the way. Todays guest was Lizzie Huxley-Jones, editor of Stim: An Autistic Anthology, available online or at any good bookshop. When Lizzie was hawking this book around Twitter, trying to get enough backers on Unbound, I asked to be put on the list for a gifted copy – that is, I was too poor at the time to support the book but if someone paid for an extra copy for someone without funds then I would be in with a chance of getting one.


– Blackwells /TFhdXx0rjw- hux | lizzie huxley-jones 🍟📚 June 11, 2020 Stim: an autistic anthology is out now in paperback and ebook, feat essays, fiction and art by autistic people.
