Do you know what Andy Warhol, Albert Einstein, Jane Austen, Isaac Newton, Charles Schultz, Marie Curie, Thomas Jefferson, and Temple Grandin (she's a contemporary engineer) have in common? If you said Asperger's, then you were correct. All of these famous people are thought to have had this syndrome, which is characterized by a subset of behaviors, anxieties and drives which accompany extreme intelligence and talent, especially for thinking outside the box.
"Mindblind" is a fictional novel starring protagonist Nathaniel Clark, a fourteen year-old "Aspie" who has completed his GED, college entrance exams, and entire college education after homeschooling and self-dedication to his studies and thoeries. His strengths are numbers, formulas, Mandarin Chinese, and science. He aspires to achieve "genius" status someday, by making a lasting contribution to help mankind, and won't feel fulfilled until he does. Like other Aspies, he is much more sensitive to external noise and stimuli than "normal people", and he is awkward at displaying emotion, figuring out the complexities of social relationships and feeling comfortable in new experiences. Nathaniel's father never accepted him for being different, for being someone he couldn't relate to or explain. In fact, his dad rejects the Asperger's diagnosis, thinking his son acts odd on purpose, as a result of being spoiled or coddled.
Fortunately, Nathaniel has a small group of friends with whom he can be himself. He gains confidence and graps a sense of teenage normalcy by his close association with Jessa, Cooper and Logan. The four teens are in a band together - the wealthy but down-to-earth Cooper, gorgeous and wholesome songbird Jessa, younger nerdy Logan, and awkward Aspie Nathaniel. Their banter and comraderie is wonderful. Deep friendships, and most especially his close relationship with his mom - tutor, friend, mother, and advocate - is what keeps Nathaniel a whole person in touch with the real world.
Throughout the novel, Nathaniel has a running dialogue with himself which allows you to see how differently his brain works, how oddly literal and pragmatic it is. That is his world filter, which overrides, at least temporarily, emotions and creativity. Nathaniel works hard to let his creativity flow and allow emotions to surface.
Weaving believable teen friendship and complicated step-family dynamics with mental health issues and an odd mindset such as Asperger's is no small feat. Making the odd, eccentric character very likeable is an even greater feat. Jennifer Roy pulls this off seamlessly. Whether or not you have a personal interest in learning more about Asperger's, Roy's "Mindblind" is appealing to all readers who like contemporary, teen realistic fiction, love underdogs, and are looking for something different.
For ages 10-15