by Lucy Blackman (Author), Lucy Blackman (Author)
Born with Autism, Lucy could not understand much of what was said around her. Her own language came later from newspapers and books. She created stories and poems in her head from the words she had read. As an adult she still barely speaks. In her teens she started using a keyboard with someone touching her arm, but that was not a substitute for ordinary speech. Lucy's language had developed in a world of her own making in which she had never passed on information to someone else. Even today she does not answer questions in the same way as other people. Lucy's ambition was to write a book. She went to High School. She wrote letters and essays, learnt how to explain herself and began to create characters in her stories. While writing she started to understand her own autism, and through that understanding she came to type on a computer with no physical support to complete her BA (Hons) in Literary Studies. An essential resource for anyone interested in autism, sensory issues, augmentative and alternative communication (AAC), language and the practice of writing, Lucy's Story is also an intriguing, poignant and exciting autobiography.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 300
Publisher: Jessica Kingsley
Published: 11 Jul 2001
ISBN 10: 1843100428
ISBN 13: 9781843100423
In this book Lucy Blackman describes her experience of growing up with autism. The book re-opens the controversy about facilitated communication , a method of enabling people who cannot speak to communicate using an alphabet board or keyboard.
Pioneered in Australia by Rosemary Crossley, the technique is now used around the world. Crossley taught Lucy how to use the Cannon communicator to write words on ticker tape. A facilitator - in Lucy's case her mother - supports the arm of the keyboard user and in time the person learns to generate words.
Controversy has arisen over the role of the facilitator who determines which key is struck and hence is the real author of the words generated.
The book provides unique reflections on the inner world of autism, but the critical reader who generated these insights. This is a book worth reading, even by the spectical.
-- Oliver Russell, consultant psychiatrist