In a Different Key: The Story of Autism

Awards:   Short-listed for Pulitzer Prize (Non-Fiction) 2017
Author:   John Donvan ,  Caren Zucker
Publisher:   Random House USA Inc
ISBN:  

9780307985705


Pages:   688
Publication Date:   17 January 2017
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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In a Different Key: The Story of Autism


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Awards

  • Short-listed for Pulitzer Prize (Non-Fiction) 2017

Overview

PULITZER PRIZE FINALIST • NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • “Sweeping in scope but with intimate personal stories, this is a deeply moving book about the history, science, and human drama of autism.”—Walter Isaacson, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Code Breaker   “Remarkable . . . A riveting tale about how a seemingly rare childhood disorder became a salient fixture in our cultural landscape.”—The Wall Street Journal (Ten Best Nonfiction Books of the Year) The inspiration for the PBS documentary, In a Different Key   In 1938, Donald Triplett of Forest, Mississippi, became the first child diagnosed with autism. Beginning with his family’s odyssey, In a Different Key tells the extraordinary story of this often misunderstood condition, from the civil rights battles waged by the families of those who have it to the fierce debates among scientists over how to define and treat it.    Unfolding over decades, In a Different Key is a beautifully rendered history of people determined to secure a place in the world for those with autism—by liberating children from dank institutions, campaigning for their right to go to school, challenging expert opinion on what it means to have autism, and persuading society to accept those who are different.    This is also a story of fierce controversies—from the question of whether there is truly an autism “epidemic,” and whether vaccines played a part in it; to scandals involving “facilitated communication,” one of many unsuccessful treatments; to stark disagreements about whether scientists should pursue a cure for autism; to compelling evidence that Hans Asperger, discoverer of the syndrome named after him, participated in the Nazi program that consigned disabled children to death. By turns intimate and panoramic, In a Different Key takes us on a journey from an era when families were shamed and children were condemned to institutions to one in which a cadre of people with autism push not simply for inclusion, but for a new understanding of autism: as difference rather than disability.

Full Product Details

Author:   John Donvan ,  Caren Zucker
Publisher:   Random House USA Inc
Imprint:   Crown Publications
Dimensions:   Width: 13.20cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 20.30cm
Weight:   0.488kg
ISBN:  

9780307985705


ISBN 10:   0307985709
Pages:   688
Publication Date:   17 January 2017
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

A New York Times BestsellerA New York Times Editors' Choice Magnificent...Spellbinding a fable about greed, power and betrayal told through the lens of autism...Chock-full of suspense and hairpin turns...This book does what no other on autism has done: capture all the slippery, bewildering and deceptive aspects...I have been the mother of an autistic son since 1988...I wept and laughed and raged while reading In a Different Key, all the while thinking, Yes! This is my experience, including the raw and dirty parts, but also the wonder and joy. ANN BAUER, WASHINGTON POST Remarkable In a Different Key: The Story of Autism tells a riveting tale about how a seemingly rare childhood disorder became a salient fixture in our cultural landscape. It features vivid portraits of people with autism and their devoted parents and recounts dramatic controversies among well-intentioned and occasionally misguided advocates and doctors who have tried to help those with the condition. These gripping personal stories give the book tremendous narrative drive. WALL STREET JOURNAL The prose is vivid, the tempo rapid and the perspective intimate, as if each character has been filmed with a hand-held camera. JEROME GROOPMAN, NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW In a Different Key is a story about autism as it has passed through largely American institutions, shaped not only by psychiatrists and psychologists but by parents, schools, politicians, and lawyers. It shows how, in turn, the condition acquired a powerful capacity both to change those institutions and to challenge our notions of what is pathological and what is normal. STEVEN SHAPIN, NEW YORKER This is not a how-to guide or a polemic on neurodiversity. The book probes a difficult subject with intelligence and compassion and makes you think. The complete absence of hysteria will make it essential reading for many... its insights and quiet wisdom demand our attention, and gratitude. AMY BLOOM; O, THE OPRAH MAGAZINE In a Different Key is nothing if not judicious and fair-minded in its approach to a field harried by controversies and enmities from the very start [the book] is grounded and sensible, which in the contentious world of autism activism constitutes a kind of grace. LAURA MILLER, SLATE The authors have captured the art of storytelling and the book therefore has a broad appeal, beyond those directly involved or affected by autism Comprehensive and illuminating From cover to cover this book stirs up a combination of emotions. Admiration for the parents that took a stand; incredulity at treatments and assumptions; and gratitude to scientists and activists that dedicate their expertise and devote their energy to making people with autism spectrum disorder feel part of a world that appears to fear nonconformity to what is considered normal You must read this book. THE LANCET A fascinating history of science, treatment, and civil rights. NEWSDAY A fascinating history of this confounding condition. PEOPLE A fascinating and comprehensive history told from a personal perspective In a Different Key shares the often debilitating aspects of autism yet shows how those with autism can and do flourish with the right supports and environments, and how their lives, and the lives of their families, are filled with joys and triumphs and fun and irreverence, too. CHICAGO TRIBUNE Fascinating A 560-page history of autism sounds intimidating, but fear not. In a Different Key takes an accessible approach that sheds much light on this human condition... through the human stories of those raising autistic children, of those trying to treat, study and research it and those who are autistic. SEATTLE TIMES In this compelling, well-researched book, the authors weave together the heroic search by parents for treatment and services for their children with the personal stories of a fascinating cast of characters. An invaluable guide for those dealing with autism and an inspiring affirmation of every individual s contribution to 'the fabric of humanity.' KIRKUS (starred) Donvan and Zucker s tremendous study keeps autism at its center while telling an extraordinary tale of social change... Viewed as a whole, the narrative ultimately reveals a transition from an emphasis on treating individual cases to a more society-wide effort for advocacy and inclusion an effort that this book will do much to advance. PUBLISHERS WEEKLY In a Different Key is almost as much a history of coping with ignorance and uncertainty as it is a voyage of discovery... It is the great achievement of this book to show how this happened in an exciting and poignant way. SUNDAY TIMES Sweeping in scope but with intimate personal stories, this is a deeply moving book about the history, science, and human drama of autism. It's also something larger: a fascinating exploration of a social movement that grappled with the mysteries of mind, behavior, and the relationship between parents and children. WALTER ISAACSON, author of The Innovators and Steve Jobs Donvan and Zucker s generous yet sharp-eyed portraits of men, women, and children most of them unknown until now make it stunningly clear that we all have a stake in the story of autism. We come to understand that weare all wired differently, and that how we treat those who are different than most is a telling measure of who we truly are. This is the kind of history that not only informs but enlarges the spirit. SUSAN CAIN, author of Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking In this long-awaited work, Donvan and Zucker sensitively and accurately portray the emergence of understanding of this thing we now call autism, a story that goes back hundreds of years. They make a compelling case for autistic traits gift and disability alike being part of the human condition. In the words of child psychiatry pioneer Leo Kanner, autism was always there, even before the diagnosis was invented. In a Different Key also provides a fresh take on the issue of neurodiversity in all its complexity. JOHN ELDER ROBISON, author of Look Me in the Eye and Switched On In this absorbing book, John Donvan and Caren Zucker provide a comprehensive history of autism: identifying records that point toward the existence of the condition long before it was named; unpacking the evolution of the diagnosis; chronicling the history of blame attached to it; and narrating its explosion as one of the most common syndromes among children today. Fast-paced and far-reaching, this book contextualizes the arguments that autism is a horrifying epidemic with those that say it is a valuable aspect of human diversity. This is an important missing piece to the conversation about autism; no one trying to make sense of the spectrum should do so without reading this book. ANDREW SOLOMON, author of Far from the Tree InaDifferent Key transports the reader back to the earlier days of autism. It is essential reading for anyone who is interested in how society treats those who are different. TEMPLE GRANDIN, author of Thinking in Pictures and The Autistic Brain In a Different Key is filled withgripping personal historiesthat powerfully illustratethe mistakes and malpractices in the diagnosis and treatment of autism; the courage and resilience of those who fought for better treatment and deeper understanding; and the sheer variability of people who are given the autism label and too often lumped together as disabled. A fascinating and revealing read, even forthosewith no personal connection to the topic. STEPHANIE COONTZ, author of The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap Bravo to Donvan and brava to Zucker. Comically/tragically, autism's history is as emotionally dysfunctional and as beautiful as it gets. Finally, we all have an exhaustive reckoning. MICHAEL JOHN CARLEY, founder, GRASP; author of Asperger's From the Inside Out Donvan and Zucker delve deep into both the scienceand the politics of autism across time. They tell the story of the extreme treatments that have been tried, such as administering LSD or electric shocks in the 60s, to normalize these children. They uncover the tragic mercy killing of a teenager with autism by his father, and explore the MMR vaccine-causes-autism theory, named by TIME magazine as top of the list of great science frauds. This book will make a remarkable contribution to the history of autism. SIMON BARON-COHEN, author of The Essential Difference ;Director, Autism Research Centre, Cambridge University Autism is a shape changer that has continuously resisted being pinned down. This meticulously researched book leads us deeply into the history of autism and brings to life the colourful personalities and conflicting ideas that deepen the fascination of autism. UTA FRITH, Emeritus Professor of Cognitive Development at University College London Autism remains one of the great medical mysteries of our time and this is the first book to fully document the decades of efforts by parents, doctors and society to deal with it so far.For, as the authors say, this is a story that is far from over. In A Different Key is a monumental piece of journalism thatpromises to be a classic, a comprehensive baseline for evidence only future research can reveal.It is written with clarity and grace, and with heart, because the authors have both lived with autism in their own families. ROBERT MACNEIL, former anchor and co-founder of PBS NewsHour This one volume captures the textured and sometimes turbulent story of autism in all of its facets: as a scholarly and scientific endeavor, as a political and legal enterprise, as a social movement. Most especially it embeds these developments within stories of people whose lives defined and shaped the course of autism. In a Different Key is authoritative and utterly absorbing. JUDITH FAVELL, past president, Developmental Disabilities Division, American Psychological Association From the Hardcover edition.


<b>A <i>Wall Street Journal</i> Top Ten Best Nonfiction Book of 2016</b> <b><i>Washington Post</i> Notable Nonfiction List for 2016 A<i>New York Times</i>Bestseller A<i>New York Times</i>Editors' Choice</b> Magnificent...Spellbinding a fable about greed, power and betrayal told through the lens of autism...Chock-full of suspense and hairpin turns...This book does what no other on autism has done: capture all the slippery, bewildering and deceptive aspects...I have been the mother of an autistic son since 1988...I wept and laughed and raged while reading <i>In a Different Key</i>, all the while thinking, Yes! This is my experience, including the raw and dirty parts, but also the wonder and joy. <b> ANN BAUER, <i>WASHINGTON POST</i></b> Remarkable <i>In a Different Key: The Story of Autism</i> tells a riveting tale about how a seemingly rare childhood disorder became a salient fixture in our cultural landscape. It features vivid portraits of people with autism and their devoted parents and recounts dramatic controversies among well-intentioned and occasionally misguided advocates and doctors who have tried to help those with the condition. These gripping personal stories give the book tremendous narrative drive. <b><i>WALL STREET JOURNAL</b> The prose is vivid, the tempo rapid and the perspective intimate, as if each character has been filmed with a hand-held camera. <b><i></b> <b>JEROME GROOPMAN, <i>NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW</i></b> <i>In a Different Key</i> is a story about autism as it has passed through largely American institutions, shaped not only by psychiatrists and psychologists but by parents, schools, politicians, and lawyers. It shows how, in turn, the condition acquired a powerful capacity both to change those institutions and to challenge our notions of what is pathological and what is normal. <b>STEVEN SHAPIN, </b><b><i>NEW YORKER</i></b> This is not a how-to guide or a polemic on neurodiversity. The book probes a difficult subject with intelligence and compassion and makes you think. The complete absence of hysteria will make it essential reading for many... its insights and quiet wisdom demand our attention, and gratitude. <b>AMY BLOOM; <i>O, THE OPRAH MAGAZINE</b><i> <i>In a Different Key</i> is nothing if not judicious and fair-minded in its approach to a field harried by controversies and enmities from the very start [the book] is grounded and sensible, which in the contentious world of autism activism constitutes a kind of grace. <b><b> LAURA MILLER</b><i><b>, <i>SLATE </b></i></b> The authors have captured the art of storytelling and the book therefore has a broad appeal, beyond those directly involved or affected by autism Comprehensive and illuminating From cover to cover this book stirs up a combination of emotions. Admiration for the parents that took a stand; incredulity at treatments and assumptions; and gratitude to scientists and activists that dedicate their expertise and devote their energy to making people with autism spectrum disorder feel part of a world that appears to fear nonconformity to what is considered normal You must read this book. <b><i><b><i><b> THE LANCET</b> </b></i></b> A fascinating history of science, treatment, and civil rights. <i><b>NEWSDAY</i> A fascinating history of this confounding condition. <i><b>PEOPLE </i> A fascinating and comprehensive history told from a personal perspective <i>In a Different Key</i> shares the often debilitating aspects of autism yet shows how those with autism can and do flourish with the right supports and environments, and how their lives, and the lives of their families, are filled with joys and triumphs and fun and irreverence, too. <i><b> CHICAGO TRIBUNE </i> Fascinating A 560-page history of autism sounds intimidating, but fear not. <i>In a Different Key</i> takes an accessible approach that sheds much light on this human condition... through the human stories of those raising autistic children, of those trying to treat, study and research it and those who are autistic. <i><b></i><b><i> SEATTLE TIMES</b> In this compelling, well-researched book, the authors weave together the heroic search by parents for treatment and services for their children with the personal stories of a fascinating cast of characters. An invaluable guide for those dealing with autism and an inspiring affirmation of every individual s contribution to 'the fabric of humanity.' <i><b>KIRKUS </b></i>(starred) Donvan and Zucker s tremendous study keeps autism at its center while telling an extraordinary tale of social change... Viewed as a whole, the narrative ultimately reveals a transition from an emphasis on treating individual cases to a more society-wide effort for advocacy and inclusion an effort that this book will do much to advance. <b><i>PUBLISHERS WEEKLY </b><i> In a Different Key</i>is almost as much a history of coping with ignorance and uncertainty as it is a voyage of discovery... It is the great achievement of this book to show how this happened in an exciting and poignant way. <b><i>SUNDAY TIMES</i></b> Sweeping in scope but with intimate personal stories, this is a deeply moving book about the history, science, and human drama of autism. It's also something larger: a fascinating exploration of a social movement that grappled with the mysteries of mind, behavior, and the relationship between parents and children. <b>WALTER ISAACSON</b>, author of<i>The Innovators</i>and<i>Steve Jobs Donvan and Zucker s generous yet sharp-eyed portraits of men, women, and children most of them unknown until now make it stunningly clear that we all have a stake in the story of autism. We come to understand that weare all wired differently, and that how we treat those who are different than most is a telling measure of who we truly are. This is the kind of history that not only informs but enlarges the spirit. <i><i><b> </b></i><b>SUSAN CAIN</b>, author of<i>Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking</i> In this long-awaited work, Donvan and Zucker sensitively and accurately portray the emergence of understanding of this thing we now call autism, a story that goes back hundreds of years. They make a compelling case for autistic traits gift and disability alike being part of the human condition. In the words of child psychiatry pioneer Leo Kanner, autism was always there, even before the diagnosis was invented.<i>In a Different Key</i> also provides a fresh take on the issue of neurodiversity in all its complexity. <b>JOHN ELDER ROBISON</b>, author of<i>Look Me in the Eye</i>and<i>Switched On</i> In this absorbing book, John Donvan and Caren Zucker provide a comprehensive history of autism: identifying records that point toward the existence of the condition long before it was named; unpacking the evolution of the diagnosis; chronicling the history of blame attached to it; and narrating its explosion as one of the most common syndromes among children today. Fast-paced and far-reaching, this book contextualizes the arguments that autism is a horrifying epidemic with those that say it is a valuable aspect of human diversity. This is an important missing piece to the conversation about autism; no one trying to make sense of the spectrum should do so without reading this book. <b> ANDREW SOLOMON</b>, author of <i>Far from the Tree</i> <i>InaDifferent Key</i>transports the reader back to the earlier days of autism. It is essential reading for anyone who is interested in how society treats those who are different. <b>TEMPLE GRANDIN</b>, author of<i>Thinking in Pictures</i>and<i>The Autistic Brain</i> <i> In a Different Key</i>is filled withgripping personal historiesthat powerfully illustratethe mistakes and malpractices in the diagnosis and treatment of autism; the courage and resilience of those who fought for better treatment and deeper understanding; and the sheer variability of people who are given the autism label and too often lumped together as disabled. A fascinating and revealing read, even forthosewith no personal connection to the topic. <b>STEPHANIE COONTZ</b>, author of<i>The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap</i> Bravo to Donvan and brava to Zucker. Comically/tragically, autism's history is as emotionally dysfunctional and as beautiful as it gets. Finally, we all have an exhaustive reckoning. <b>MICHAEL JOHN CARLEY</b>, founder, GRASP; author of<i>Asperger's From the Inside Out</i> Donvan and Zucker delve deep into both the scienceand the politics of autism across time. They tell the story of the extreme treatments that have been tried, such as administering LSD or electric shocks in the 60s, to normalize these children. They uncover the tragic mercy killing of a teenager with autism by his father, and explore the MMR vaccine-causes-autism theory, named by <i>TIME</i> magazine as top of the list of great science frauds. This book will make a remarkable contribution to the history of autism. <b>SIMON BARON-COHEN</b>, author of <i>The Essential Difference</i>;Director, Autism Research Centre, Cambridge University Autism is a shape changer that has continuously resisted being pinned down. This meticulously researched book leads us deeply into the history of autism and brings to life the colourful personalities and conflicting ideas that deepen the fascination of autism. <b>UTA FRITH</b>, Emeritus Professor of Cognitive Development at University College London Autism remains one of the great medical mysteries of our time and this is the first book to fully document the decades of efforts by parents, doctors and society to deal with it so far.For, as the authors say, this is a story that is far from over.<i>In A Different Key</i>is a monumental piece of journalism thatpromises to be a classic, a comprehensive baseline for evidence only future research can reveal.It is written with clarity and grace, and with heart, because the authors have both lived with autism in their own families. <b>ROBERT MACNEIL</b>, former anchor and co-founder of <i>PBS NewsHour</i> This one volume captures the textured and sometimes turbulent story of autism in all of its facets: as a scholarly and scientific endeavor, as a political and legal enterprise, as a social movement. Most especially it embeds these developments within stories of people whose lives defined and shaped the course of autism.<i>In a Different Key</i>is authoritative and utterly absorbing. <b>JUDITH FAVELL, </b>past president, Developmental Disabilities Division, American Psychological Association


Author Information

John Donvan is a correspondent for ABC News, and host and moderator of the Intelligence Squared U.S. Debates, which are heard on public radio and by podcast. During his journalism career, in addition to anchoring such broadcasts as ABC’s Nightline, John served as chief White House correspondent, and held multiyear postings in London, Moscow, Jerusalem, and Amman, Jordan. He is the winner of three Emmys and the Overseas Press Club Award. He became interested in autism’s impact on families upon meeting his wife, the physician and medical school professor Ranit Mishori, who grew up in Israel with a brother profoundly affected by autism. John also performs as a live storyteller with the group Story District. He has two children and lives in Washington, DC.    Caren Zucker is a journalist and television producer who has reported on a broad range of subjects both domestically and internationally. As a producer for ABC’s World News and Nightline, working alongside Peter Jennings, Charlie Gibson, and Diane Sawyer, she covered economic summits, presidential campaigns, social trends, and the Olympic Games. Emmy-nominated, she was honored for her part in ABC’s coverage of 9/11 with two of television’s most prestigious prizes, the Peabody and the Alfred L. DuPont awards. Her oldest son Mickey’s autism diagnosis inspired a new direction in her reporting: to bring a better understanding of autism’s realities. Zucker and her husband, NBC Sports senior producer John McGuinness, have three children and reside in New Jersey.

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