The book is an honest, first-hand account of how people with autism deal with the loss of someone in their life. It explores how people with autism feel and express the loss and how they come to terms with their grief, offering practical advice to parents and carers on how best to support someone with autism during these difficult times.
I’m autistic and I thought this book was pretty good! I really appreciated that it started off with society’s general response to 9/11 because I finally understand why I couldn’t relate at all to how most people reacted to that.
This book contained solid information about how autistic people tend to respond to death and other traumatic events. I really wish there had been more included about non-death-related situations of grief, but I found the book to be helpful regardless.
I didn’t like that we were sometimes referred to as “ASD” individuals or people or that “people/children with autism” was used so often, but in 2012 the use of “autistic” wasn’t as widely accepted so I tried not to let the other terms bother me too much when they were used.
Overall a good and helpful book, IMO. It’s given me a lot to think about regarding what plans I should have in place in case someone close to me or close to my children dies. The template towards the end should also be helpful when making those plans!
I shouldn't be surprised, given the length of the book and the fact that it is clearly written for ignorant allistic people. I feel like Lipsky fell into the same fallacy as Temple Grandin used to, of universalizing her own experience to all autistic people. She certainly includes plenty of hedging language ("many but not all..."), but when only one perspective or behavior is presented, the hedging falls flat.
Personally, the biggest flaw was the lack of acknowledgment of religious and cultural variations in death rituals. Her book is situated squarely within a Christian attitude towards death (talks of wakes, heaven, etc) which will only apply to a certain subset of readers. If that's all Lipsky knows or is comfortable writing about, that's perfectly fine; but I wish she would have acknowledged this bias, or even brought in other writers to provide additional perspectives.
This book is very centered on how the author, who has autism herself, experiences grief. It is not reflective of how all autistic people grieve, but the author presents it that way. I find this problematic. I think the book is written for an allistic audience (people who are not autistic.) This isn’t a bad thing. But her one-sided perspective may give allistic people the impression that all autistic people are the same. I do recommend this book, but I encourage readers to remember that her way of grieving is not the same way all autistic people grieve.