I've just started reading Writers on the Spectrum by professor of
literature Julia Brown. In it, Brown examines the life and work of several
authors thought to be autistic, including Emily Dickinson, Henry David
Thoreau, Lewis Carroll, Hans Christian Andersen, William Butler Yeats and
others.
According to Brown, spectrum writing shares some very distinctive
characteristics. Not surprisingly, I can recognize most of them in my own
work. Some are "problems" I've been struggling with for years. Thanks to
Brown, it occurs to me that struggling to be like other (non-autistic) writers
may not be the answer.
While I've gained insight into what the answer is not, however, I'm less
clear on what it is.
Maybe the answer is to switch genres, like Hans Christian Anderson did, or keep my
writing close, like Emily Dickinson. Or just do my own thing and have fun with
it, like Lewis Carroll in the Alice books.
Whatever it is, I will figure it out and when I do you'll be the first to know.
I'll be talking more about Writers on the Spectrum and some of the authors Brown features in an upcoming post.
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Writers on the Spectrum
(affiliate link) is available on Amazon. Please note that if you purchase a book via one
of my links, I will earn a small commission at no cost to you.
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