I read the OASIS guide to Asperger's Syndrome (very long, but also very informative), the one by Tony Attwood partly (got it from the library once), George and Sam by Charlotte Moore (NT mother about her two autistic boys, daily life with them, how they got their diagnosis and so on. I don't know if she fully understands her sons, I don't remember her ever say something in the book which might indicate that she thinks so though), Beyond the Silence by Tito Mukhopadhyay, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime by Mark Haddon (found the Aspie boy in it a bit stereotypical) and, if this counts at all, All Cats have Asperger's Syndrome by Kathy Hoopmann (informative only to somebody who has never heard of AS before, but with cute pics).
I also read three other books, but they are of German authors, one called I don't want to be inside me anymore and the other title I don't know how to translate, both written by Birger Sellin (nonverbal LFA). The other one is called Colored Shadows and Bats by Axel Brauns (either Aspie or HFA, I think it's never clearly said).
I found all of them to be nice and/or interesting. If I had to pick favourite ones it'd probably be the one by Tito Mukhopadhyay (great writing style with beautiful poems and wise statements) and the one by Axel Brauns as I could relate to that the most.
Has anybody read the book Asperger's and Girls? I'd be curious to know more about that one.
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People with courage and character always seem sinister to the rest.
Hermann Hesse