Noetic wrote:
I absolutely loved "Speed of Dark" - the protagonist is autistic, not "Aspie", that might explain why he wasn't acting like some here expected him to.
The only "Aspie"-ish character (monologues, doesn't realise when he's not wanted, blunt, impulsive, forgetful, egocentric etc.), until he started going mental, was Don.
Isn't this just a stereotype, though? So far I got the impression that there are as many types of autism/AS as there are autistic/AS people.
Lou didn't like the fancy-dress event he went to, and found people in costumes baffling and frightening (and I presume Elizabeth Moon based him on some existing type of autistic personality - if not on her son, then on someone else who is on the spectrum, since she said she interacted with autistic people for years before writing the book); on the other hand, Donna Williams writes, I forget where, that some autistic children feel more comfortable when a certain barrier is created between them and other people, so putting on a persona, as one does when dressing up in fancy dress, might help the teaching process.
And if one wants someone who is or at least used to be overly talkative, prone to monologuing about the same things, brutally honest, and impulsive, one might consider Temple Grandin.
As for Don's character, I don't see what's so AS about him - he's just an irascible, impulsive, selfish person.