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Popular Autism Related Books

Books can play a big role in helping you and your child with Autism. You’ll find books can be a good way to connect with your children as they learn to share, make eye contact and it enhances their speech while reading one with their parents.

Here is a list of specially curated books related to Autism available on Kindle, Pdf version and paperback.

We would love to get recommendations from you on any useful books for children with Autism that are not in this list. You could write to us at contact@autismconnect.com

Total No. of Records: 3
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The Lost Girls of Autism: The New Science of Neurodiversity in Women and Girls

The history of autism is male. When autistic girls meet clinicians, they are often misdiagnosed with anxiety, depression, personality disorders, or are missed altogether. Many women only discover they have the condition when they are much older, missing decades of support and understanding. Autism’s ‘male spotlight’ means we are only now starting to redress this profound injustice.

The Lost Girls of Autism: The New Science of Neurodiversity in Women and Girls

profileGina Rippon

paper Kindle Paperback

date April 3, 2025

languageEnglish

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Off the Spectrum: Why the Science of Autism Has Failed Women and Girls

Who comes to mind when you think about an autistic person? It might be yourself, a relative or friend, a public figure, a fictional character, or a stereotyped image. Regardless, for most of us, it’s likely to be someone male. Autistic women are systematically underdiagnosed, under-researched, and underserved by medical and social systems—to devastating effects.

Off the Spectrum: Why the Science of Autism Has Failed Women and Girls

profileGina Rippon

paper Kindle

date April 1, 2025

languageEnglish

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The Lost Girls of Autism: How Science Failed Autistic Women - and the New Research that's Changing the Story

In The Lost Girls of Autism, renowned brain scientist Gina Rippon delves into the emerging science of female autism, asking why it has been systematically ignored for so long. Generations of researchers, convinced autism was a male problem, simply didn’t bother looking for it in women. But it is now becoming increasingly clear that many autistic women and girls do not fit the traditional, male, model of autism. Instead, they camouflage and mask, hiding their autistic traits to accommodate a society that shuns them.

The Lost Girls of Autism: How Science Failed Autistic Women - and the New Research that's Changing the Story

profileGina Rippon

paper Kindle

date 3 April 2025

languageEnglish

attachPurchase Kindle/Paperback |
Go to eBook