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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

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Children on the Bridge: A Story of Autism in South Africa

Children on the bridge is a dramatic story of a journey through the world of autism in South Africa, but it is also a personal and very real account that offers insight into the experiences of someone touched by this complex and unpredictable disorder. Autism has recently become extremely topical in the media. Autism South Africa estimates that 1 in 165 children may be affected by some degree with autism although very little ahs been published that relates specifically to autism in South Africa and there are many parents who have nowhere to turn when their children are diagnosed. This story provides a way across the bridge between our world and that of the people and families affected by autism, and helps us to identify and respect the differences between the ways our different brains work.

Children on the Bridge: A Story of Autism in South Africa

profileKirsten Miller

paper Paperback

date 14 Oct 2006

languageEnglish

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Not Even Wrong: Adventures in Autism

When Paul Collins's son Morgan was two years old, he could read, spell, and perform multiplication tables in his head...but not answer to his own name. A casual conversation-or any social interaction that the rest of us take for granted-will, for Morgan, always be a cryptogram that must be painstakingly decoded. He lives in a world of his own: an autistic world. In Not Even Wrong, Paul Collins melds a memoir of his son's autism with a journey into this realm of permanent outsiders. Examining forgotten geniuses and obscure medical archives, Collins's travels take him from an English churchyard to the Seattle labs of Microsoft, and from a Wisconsin prison cell block to the streets of Vienna. It is a story that reaches from a lonely clearing in the Black Forest into the London palace of King George I, from Defoe and Swift to the discovery of evolution; from the modern dawn of the computer revolution to, in the end, the author's own household.

Not Even Wrong: Adventures in Autism

profilePaul Collins

paper Paperback

date April 3, 2004

languageEnglish

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Autism: How to raise a happy autistic child

A wise SatNav for what is often a bewildering, or even scary, zone of parenting. The book offers real-world, road-tested, child-first and family-friendly advice; while also highlighting the twin truths that autism is not a tragedy, and that adaptation and acceptance are not resignation' David Mitchell, bestselling author and co-translator of The Reason I Jump.'A must-read for anyone with an autistic child in their life' Laura James, author of Odd Girl Out

Autism: How to raise a happy autistic child

profileJessie Hewitson

paper Kindle Paperback

date 22 Mar 2018

languageEnglish

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The Autism Mom's Survival Guide (for Dads, too!): Creating a Balanced and Happy Life While Raising a Child with Autism

Given the daily challenges of raising a child with autism, it’s easy for parents to lose themselves and for their overall quality of life to plummet. Susan Senator interweaves the voices of autism parents, researchers, and professionals to offer guidance and encouragement on how to find happiness and fulfillment in the midst of the struggles of raising an autistic child. Topics include: how to handle feelings of despair and hopelessness; finding fun, even during turbulent times; caring for your marriage; and finding a balance between accepting your child as he or she is and seeking new treatments.

The Autism Mom's Survival Guide (for Dads, too!): Creating a Balanced and Happy Life While Raising a Child with Autism

profileSusan Senator

paper Kindle Paperback

date 2010

languageEnglish

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Autism in the Family: Caring and Coping Together

How can parents provide the best support for their child with autism-and ensure that the whole family's needs are met? It's a question faced by every parent of a child on the autism spectrum, and this book answers it with keen insight, reassuring honesty, and practical guidance. A psychologist and father of an adult son with autism, Dr. Robert Naseef has both personal and professional expertise to share with overwhelmed families. Weaving wisdom from years of clinical practice with candid first-hand insights on parenting a child from birth through adulthood, Naseef helps parents navigate the complex emotional journey to acceptance guide their child's behavior and development at every age maintain a strong and mutually supportive marriage understand the needs of siblings and provide sensitive support collaborate effectively with professionals address specific issues like meltdowns, food sensitivities, sleeping, and toileting manage stress build a strong circle of support with family.

Autism in the Family: Caring and Coping Together

profileRobert A. Naseef

paper Kindle Paperback

date 2012

languageEnglish

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We Said, They Said: 50 Things Parents and Teachers of Students with Autism Want Each Other to Know

Cassie Zupke has talked to a lot of people in her role as the founder and director of a non?profit education and support group for students with Asperger's and high-functioning autism. She's been a mentor, a trainer, and an advocate for children, having attended meetings, reassured parents and teachers, helped dry eyes and offered more advice than was probably wanted to the children's parents and educators . She has initiated programs, thrown some of them out to build better ones, and helped other people launch their own. Over the years, Cassie has worked with untold numbers of families and educators. We Said, They Said is a compilation of what the parents and teachers have told her -- their fears, their concerns, and their passions - in order that all involved with the child's care can understand the things that drive the others so, when they sit down to meet to decide how they're going to best help their child, they can achieve their mutual goal.

We Said, They Said: 50 Things Parents and Teachers of Students with Autism Want Each Other to Know

profileCassie Zupke

paper Kindle Paperback

date 2013

languageEnglish

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Crazy Love: A Traumedy about Life with Autism

The day that Macy's store security informed the author that her five year old daughter was boarding a crowded elevator, dragging a naked mannequin by his head, leaving behind a trail of plaster limbs and fine menswear, was the day absurdism became the new world order in the Walter household. Autism isn't funny. Yet, sometimes laughter rises feebly out of the ashes of tragedy, a little befuddled and slightly singed, like a hungover phoenix after mardi gras. Crazy Love: a Traumedy About Life with Autism, is a collection of fragments from the life of a little girl, that smokes out the farcical humor with saucy candor. Fresh as roadkill, from a mother caught in the twin headlights of reality and insanity, Crazy Love captures the dark humor that careens out of control when autism is at the wheel.

Crazy Love: A Traumedy about Life with Autism

profileSharie Walter

paper Paperback

date 2011

languageEnglish

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What I Wish I'd Known about Raising a Child with Autism: A Mom and a Psychologist Offer Heartfelt Guidance for the First Five Years

Bobbi Sheahan, mother of a child with autism, and psychologist Kathy DeOrnellas, Ph.D., did not write this book to lecture you on how to parent your child. Instead, they offer themselves as your scouts in the field, who have valuable information to share from the moment you realize your kid is different (My, what a quiet baby I have!), to the self-righteous moms on the playground, to holding your marriage together and the realm of routines.

What I Wish I'd Known about Raising a Child with Autism: A Mom and a Psychologist Offer Heartfelt Guidance for the First Five Years

profileBobbi Sheahan

paper Kindle Paperback

date 2011

languageEnglish

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Look at My Eyes: Autism Spectrum Disorders: Autism and PDD-NOS: Early Intervention and Navigating the System

Melanie Fowler brings a refreshing and useful balance of personal experience and educated expertise to the discussion of autism spectrum disorders. Melanie does not concern herself with the “whys” or theories surrounding these disorders. Instead, she addresses the daily struggles of children and their families from her perspective as a parent to a son with PDD-NOS (pervasive developmental disorder—not otherwise specified). Melanie tells parents what actually works. Her husband, Seth, joins her at times to offer thoughts and experiences from a dad's perspective. Together, they let parents know that others have been there, that there is hope, that insurance battles can be conquered, and that these special children can progress, learn, and grow. Whether she's describing their potty-training woes or listing supplies that can help improve fine motor skills, Melanie is an honest, experienced cheerleader for the growth and success of these children and their families.

Look at My Eyes: Autism Spectrum Disorders: Autism and PDD-NOS: Early Intervention and Navigating the System

profileMelanie Fowler

paper Paperback

date 2011

languageEnglish

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Autism Mom

At age 33, it seemed that Shirley Blaier-Stein had it all. She lived in New York City with her loving husband and beautiful boy and was well into a successful legal career. When her son Dan was diagnosed with autism at age three, her world falls apart. Lonely, isolated, and with no answers or hope from doctors, she realizes that she has to pave her own road to Dan’s healing. Determined to not leave a rock unturned, Shirley dives into learning everything she can about autism and treatments. She comes across the amazing story of Joseph, a spiritual healer who was severely autistic as a child. Joseph explains to her that autism is a language that most people don’t understand, and that parents are the autistic child’s primary healers and channels to the world. Autism Mom unfolds a riveting story on how to understand autism, speak its language, and truly communicate with the autistic child.

Autism Mom

profileShirley Blaier-Stein

paper Kindle Paperback

date 2013

languageEnglish

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