Puneet Varma (Editor)

Like Colour to the Blind

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Publication date
  
1998

ISBN
  
978-1-85302-720-8

Originally published
  
1998

Preceded by
  
Somebody Somewhere

Page count
  
340

3.8/5
Goodreads

Pages
  
340

OCLC
  
42379583

Author
  
Donna Williams

Followed by
  
Everyday Heaven

Genre
  
Autobiography

Like Colour to the Blind t0gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcRZd3qSEb2LJ9brO

Publisher
  
Jessica Kingsley Publishers

Similar
  
Donna Williams books, Autism books

Excerpt 1 from like colour to the blind by donna williams


Like Colour To The Blind (1998) is the third in a series of four autobiographical works by internationally bestselling autistic author Donna Williams. Once published in the US using the American spelling 'color', it is now published worldwide by Jessica Kingsley Publishers using the UK spelling 'colour'. It has been published in several languages worldwide.

Contents

Like Colour To The Blind covers Williams' relationship and 'accidental marriage' to 'Ian', a man on the autistic spectrum as she exorcises the vast array of stored behaviours, responses, actions and phrases from her repertoire to discover what is left that is 'self'. The pair also develop a system called 'checking' which they use to tap into true wants and likes, as the only means of differentiating these from stored or learned responses.

The book relates Williams' diagnosis with scotopic sensitivity syndrome, and her experience with tinted lenses on her visual perceptual disorders including visual fragmentation, context blindness, face blindness, and loss of depth perception. This led to a wide social awakening to visual perceptual disorders in people on the autistic spectrum.

Williams also writes about facilitated communication, covering the story of 'Alex' and quoting his first letters, as he develops communication for the first time through assisted typing, enabling his movement from special education towards a future as a college graduate.

Excerpt 3 from like colour to the blind


References

Like Colour to the Blind Wikipedia