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Nobody Nowhere: The Extraordinary Autobiography of an Autistic

AUTHOR: Donna Williams
ISBN: 0380722178

SHORT DESCRIPTION: A young Australian woman once trapped inside autism's nightmarish prison takes readers into this little-understood world in her searing, lyrical autobiography. Donna Williams offers unique insight into the workings of an autistic mind and sheds...

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         Editorial Review

Nobody Nowhere: The Extraordinary Autobiography of an Autistic
- Book Review,
by Donna Williams


From Publishers Weekly
Victims of the complex, much-misunderstood and professionally baffling disease of autism will find an eloquent voice in Australian-born Williams, one of its victorious survivors. After 25 years, this daughter of abusive parents, shunted from school to school, began to emerge from a private, protective, hallucinatory world in which she was inhabitated by multiple personalities. Here Williams recounts how she learned to communicate and live with others. Inspired by an empathetic therapist, and determined to "take herself apart and put herself back together," Williams resumed schooling, graduating from college with honors. While she will always be autistic, her moving memoir and clear analysis of the nature of her illness shows how she was able to transcend it at least partially. Photos not seen by PW. Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal
Williams is a young Australian woman who has overcome enormous handicaps in order to function in the world. As auto biography or literature, her book is indeed a satisfactory guide to understanding the autistic experience. However, Williams's family is so dysfunctional--impoverished, abusive, and negligent--that it is difficult to sort out which of her problems are due to the autism and which stem from other factors. Consequently, Judy and Sean Bar ron's There's a Boy in Here (LJ 2/1/92), jointly written by an autistic and his mother, is a better choice for most librar ies as a source illuminating the world of autistic people and their families.-Mary Ann Hughes, Washington State Univ. Libs., PullmanCopyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.



"Remarkable."



"An astounding book...by a woman who has revealed a mysterious world to millions of others."



"As brave a book as you'll ever read."



"An astounding book...by a woman who has revealed a mysterious world to millions of others."



"An extraordinary personal journey..."



"By turns fascinating and harrowing...a riveting autobiography that describes how autism feels from the inside."


Review
"Nobody Nowhere offers a fascinating testimony to an intelligence undimmed by mental turmoil."
-The New York Times Book Review

"A penetrating view of the radically different world that many autistic people inhabit."
-Maclean's


From the Trade Paperback edition.


Book Description
"This is a story of two battles, a battle to keep out 'the world' and a battle to join it."She inhabits a place of chaos, cacophony, and dancing light--where physical contact is painful and sights and sounds have no meaning. Although labeled, at times, deaf, retarded, or disturbed, Donna Williams is autistic--afflicted by a baffling condition of heightened sensory perception that imprisons the sufferer in a private, almost hallucinatory universe of patterns and colors. Nobody Nowhere is Donna's story in her own words--a haunting, courageous memoir of the titanic struggles she has endured in her quest to merge "my world" with "the world."


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         Book Review

Nobody Nowhere: The Extraordinary Autobiography of an Autistic
- Book Reviews,
by Donna Williams

Nobody Nowhere: The Extraordinary Autobiography of an Autistic

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Labeled deaf, retarded, disturbed, and insane, Donna Williams lived in a world of her own. Alternating between rigid hostility and extroversion, she waged what she termed her war against "the world." She lived in a dreamlike state, withdrawn, viewing her incomprehensible surroundings from the security of a "world under glass," parroting the voices of those around her in the hope that they would leave her alone. Few people understood her, least of all Donna herself. She knew only that something was wrong with her, and she yearned to be "normal." It was not until three years ago, when Donna was twenty-five, that she discovered the word - autism - that would at last give her the opportunity to understand herself and to build a bridge to join the real world. Nobody Nowhere, Donna's extraordinary autobiography, is her attempt to come to terms with autism and is a vivid memoir of the titanic struggles she has endured in her quest to merge "my world" with "the world." The book takes readers on an incredible journey into the mind of an autistic person and in the process gives an unprecedented insider's view of a little-understood condition and destroys the many myths and misconceptions about autism. As useful as the label of autism has been for her, her memoir reveals that the label does not define her. This eloquent, often searing book also illuminates her fierce intelligence, creativity, and sense of humor. Hers is a story of incredible courage and inspiration, too. Reared in an extremely hostile environment, Donna faced the ever-present threat of institutionalization. Instead, she ran away from home at a young age, survived on the streets, and even managed to get herself through college. Today she lives independently. While Nobody Nowhere will be a breakthrough book for autistic people and their families, its poetic sensibility and extraordinary insights will make it inspired reading for anyone interested in the soul of the mind.

FROM THE CRITICS

Daniel Goleman

An extraordinary personal journey...Ms. Williams maps a territory that has seemed the most impenetrable of all...A fascinating testimonial to an intelligence undimmed by mental turmoil. —The New York Times Book Review

Peter Jennings

An astounding book...by a woman who has revealed a mysterious world to millions of others.

People

By turns fascinating and harrowing...a riveting autobiography that describes how autism feels from the inside.

Boston Globe

Remarkable.

Los Angeles Times Book Review

As brave a book as you'll ever read. Read all 7 "From The Critics" >


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