Look me in the eye

my life with Asperger's

288 pages

English language

Published July 5, 2007 by Bantam ; [, Crown Publishers, Random House].

ISBN:
978-1-86325-599-8
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OCLC Number:
174094109

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4 stars (10 reviews)

Look Me in the Eye is a moving and unexpectedly funny memoir of growing up with Asperger's syndrome (a form of high-functioning autism) at a time when the diagnosis didn't even exist. Along the way it also tells the story of two brothers born eight years apart yet devoted to each other: the author and his younger brother, who would grow up to become Augusten Burroughs, author of the bestselling Running with Scissors and who has contributed a beautiful foreword to this book. For anyone who loved The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, and of course Running with Scissors.

9 editions

Review of 'Look Me in the Eye' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

John Elder is the brother of Running with Scissors memoirist Augsten Bouroghs. John's memoir focus on his life with Asperges which he didn't know he had until he was 40. John had a pretty successful life considering he dropped out of high school and his parents were insane. He toured with KISS, made toys for Milton Bradley, and ran he own luxury car dealership. He doesn't brag about any of that, he just tells his thought process and how he's had to adjust.
He has some genuine lol moments like this prank he played on a Vice President at MB, John cut up Formica and left on a mirror to make it look like cocaine. the VP took the bait multiple times and John got it on camera. I am still laughing about that.

Review of 'Look Me in the Eye' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I'm reasonably happy with this book. Judging the cover, I didn't think it would be any good. Then I saw that Augusten Burroughs wrote the intro, so I thought it must be good. Then I read that Augusten is the author's brother, which made me think it isn't any good.

But I started it anyway.

And it is good. It's not written with the same scathing wit of Augusten, but in a nice, refreshing way - like I could hang out with the author.

There's also some pleasing crossover of life details with the brothers, which adds a satisfying amount of triangulation.

It's a biography more than a story of autism, but I don't feel cheated out of reading about autism.

I was reading it this morning before I left the house for work, and as I walked outside I felt like I had been awake for hours, because the …

Review of 'Look Me in the Eye' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Reviewing this book will be a complex affair; I gave it four stars but I wouldn't say I "liked" or "enjoyed" it. It was certainly educational, about Aspies yes, but also about humanity in general. The book often made me angry, however, with its characteristic habits (which I find among "normal" men as well as Aspies) of blowing off anything that he personally wasn't interested in or good at as unimportant... and by chronically lumping all "normal" people as possessing certain characteristics. Many "normal" people experience the same sufferings that he describes, only we suck it up and learn to cope, or pretend to cope. And not all "normal" people prefer platitudes to actual conversation -- and when we do, it is often for a functional reason. So I hope he gets off his "actually, this is better" place, and grows up some more.

So the book was often infuriating. …

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Subjects

  • Robison, John Elder -- Mental health
  • Asperger's syndrome -- Patients -- United States -- Biography

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