When Montreal writer Joel Yanofsky found out, somewhat unexpectedly, that he was going to be a first-time father at age 42, he envisioned the idealized father-son relationship: going to baseball games together, watching classic movies, swapping stories. Even before the birth, Yanofsky was telling jokes to his partner's expanding belly, communing with his unborn son.
By the time he was a preschooler, Yanofsky's only child would fixate on lining up his toys in exact order, or on a certain song, or on a knock-knock joke, repeating it incessantly. He could erupt into three-hour crying jags. It became increasingly evident that he was not like most other children.
Jonah was given a diagnosis of autism when he was almost 4. Yanofsky's visions of the classic father-son relationship disappeared.
``When you are told your child has autism, it's the future that is taken away,'' he writes in his new memoir, of his thinking at the time. In its place was the worry of whether his son would ever go to high school, drive a car, buy his own clothes, live his own life, be happy. Added to that was a nagging interior mantra he recognized as ignoble but couldn't help thinking anyway: ``Why me?''
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Book review: Bad Animals: A Father's Accidental Education in Autism, byJoel Yanofsky
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Books by and for Autistic Children - NYTimes.com
Books by and for Autistic ChildrenBy PAMELA PAULApril is Autism Awareness Month, and given the increase in the number of children with autism spectrum disorders (the rate is in constant dispute, but some estimate that A.S.D. affects as many as 1 in 110 children), a stack of new books for and about autistic children is to be expected.
This year, several of the books look noticeably different, shedding the institutional feel of earlier takes on the subject. The mission remains, but the books look like the kinds of books children may actually want to read.
Two new ones specifically for autistic young people are oversized, colorful and interactive. “Point to Happy: A Book for Kids on the Autism Spectrum” by Miriam Smith and Afton Fraser includes a large hand pointer that readers can use to help identify facial expressions depicted in the book’s photographs.
Monday, April 18, 2011
reviews | Special Needs Kids Go Pharm-Free
Library Journal recommends it, and mom bloggers are loving Special Needs Kids Go Pharm-Free. See why with their reviews below. Click to listen to an author interview with It’s Your Health Network.
Sandra Frank, Ed D, RD, LDN says author and dietitian Judy Converse’s work “…is very much needed and ground breaking in the field of dietetics.” See why Special Needs Kids Go Pharm Free and Special Needs Kids Eat Right topped Dr. Frank’s Dietitian’s On Line blog on World Autism Awareness Day for 2011.
Food Sensitivity Journal: “If I were master of the universe, I would make sure every pediatrician and every new parent has access to this book.”
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Jersey City teen author to donate $1 from every book of hers sold to autism - NJ.com
A Jersey City teen author is pitching in to raise awareness about autism.
In July, Alyssa Pierce put out her first children's book, "Caroline and Rebecca: Rebecca Gets into Trouble."
In honor of April being National Autism Awareness Month, Pierce has pledged to donate $1 from every book sale to The Simpson-Baber Foundation for the Autistic Inc., which is based in Bayonne.
Monday, April 11, 2011
Teacher's Book Promotes Autism Awareness - Hillsborough, NJ Patch
The book involves an elementary school teacher whose students are learning about autism awareness and culminates with them visiting the school’s autistic class, Wargo said.
“They learn about how they can walk with these kids,” she said. “They learn about why there are different and to understand what is it to be an autistic kid.”
The most important lessons students and teachers can draw from the book is acceptance and awareness, she said.
A Cutting Edge Therapies a Day Keeps... Contest for This Great Book! - AGE OF AUTISM
The parents of children with autism know that research is a full-time job. For parents with limited time, ability, or resources to do this, Ken Siri and Tony Lyons have compiled the latest in autism research and treatment. Cutting-Edge Therapies for Autism contains contributions from more than eighty experts on a variety of therapies, models, and multifaceted evaluation and treatment centers. Each contributor provides readers with an easy-to-understand description of the topic, including its scientific rationale, development, risks, and benefits. Siri and Lyons include the therapies of the future, focusing on current clinical trials, ongoing research, and the researchers who are striving to better understand autism and find new treatments.
Families face challenge of raising autistic children
Bobbi Barber, co-owner of the center and who also recently authored the book, Autism, Adolescence & Adulthood, Finding the Path to Independence' says "sometimes they are at a loss for what to do or how to do it."
"A lot of [his] friends kids are getting their driver's licenses and they're going to prom and you’re starting to talk about high school things and that's just not in his future," said Karen Howington, whose son just turned 16.
Howington said she has been preparing Drew for the long term but it's just now becoming reality.
Friday, April 8, 2011
Point to Happy: For Children on the Autism Spectrum
Conceived of, written, and designed for children on the autism spectrum, Point to Happy combines a picture book and a pointer to create a breakthrough in reaching children who communicate best through pictures. Ingenious in its simplicity, it was created by a grandmother, Miriam Smith, and mother, Afton Fraser, for Ms Fraser’s son, a young boy on the autism spectrum.
Point to happy. Point to sad. Point to hug. Give me a hug. The parent reads, the child points. It turns reading into a joyful, shared experience. Dozens of friendly photographs are compelling to look at and easy to understand. The text is clear and direct. By pointing to the pictures in the book—moods, activities, everyday objects, the rituals of going to bed and getting ready in the morning—children will learn to convey their wants and needs, their experiences and, most importantly, their feelings.
The simple device of the pointer, with its soft, molded hand on a wand—safety-tested and 100 percent nontoxic and PVC-and phthalate-free—begs to be held and used. And using it—the motor task of holding and pointing, again and again—is an effective tool to help a child focus.
About the Author
Miriam Smith, a consultant at CUNY Media Relations and former magazine writer and designer, is a doting grandmother of seven. She lives in Northport, New York.
Margo Smithwick, daughter of Miriam and sister of Afton, is a professional photographer.
Toni Giannone, who consulted on the book, is a Communication Disorders Specialist CCC/SLP, and founder of The Speech Academy.
Afton Fraser, daughter of Miriam Smith, is a writer, actress, and mother of three, one of whom has autism. She lives in Greenwich, Connecticut.