{"id":2091,"date":"2015-04-20T09:00:55","date_gmt":"2015-04-20T13:00:55","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/?p=2091"},"modified":"2021-08-22T14:22:42","modified_gmt":"2021-08-22T14:22:42","slug":"review-anything-but-typical-by-nora-raleigh-baskin","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/2015\/04\/20\/review-anything-but-typical-by-nora-raleigh-baskin\/","title":{"rendered":"Review: <i>Anything But Typical<\/i> by Nora Raleigh Baskin"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Just like the first time I read <em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.goodreads.com\/book\/show\/5168689-anything-but-typical\">Anything But Typical<\/a><\/em> by Nora Raleigh Baskin, I profoundly identified with the protagonist, Jason Blake, age twelve and autistic. Wandering around the young adult section of the bookstore three years ago, I felt myself magnetically pulled to <em>Anything But Typical. <\/em>Working at a special education preschool, I was grappling with my own social and emotional differences, and I couldn\u2019t help but ally myself more with the autistic children than with my well-meaning but clearly non-autistic coworkers. With its allusion to not being about a \u201cneurotypical\u201d kid, the title drew me in.<\/p>\n<p><div class=\"book-cover alignleft\"><center><a href=\"\" target=\"_blank\"><img width=\"300\" height=\"455\" src=\"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-content\/uploads\/anythingbuttypical-300x455.jpg\" class=\"attachment-small size-small wp-post-image\" alt=\"Cover image for Cover for ANYTHING BUT TYPICAL\" loading=\"lazy\" longdesc=\"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/anythingbuttypical\/#desc\" srcset=\"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-content\/uploads\/anythingbuttypical-300x455.jpg 300w, https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-content\/uploads\/anythingbuttypical-66x100.jpg 66w, https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-content\/uploads\/anythingbuttypical-329x500.jpg 329w, https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-content\/uploads\/anythingbuttypical-659x1000.jpg 659w, https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-content\/uploads\/anythingbuttypical-200x304.jpg 200w, https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-content\/uploads\/anythingbuttypical.jpg 1684w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a><\/center><\/div>Why do I identify so closely with Jason Blake? Is it because we are both writers? Is it because we both have the same three letters \u2014 ASD, <em>autism spectrum disorder <\/em>\u2014 referring to us? Maybe it\u2019s because, through narrating Jason\u2019s specific story from his own perspective, Nora Raleigh brings us all closer to the reality of being human. It is his outsider status as autistic that allows him to achieve the insights about the social world in which he lives. As Jason observes from the background, he shows us the cruelty, the love, and the connections that we share as flawed people with a range of abilities. His position as outsider or different allows him to make astute observations about his family\u2019s dynamics and his classmates, whose bullying behavior is less pathologized than his own autistic behavior.<\/p>\n<p>Jason\u2019s struggles don\u2019t fit into mainstream portrayals of autistic characters written for conflicts or comic relief. His dentist tells him that he brushes his teeth too firmly. He can\u2019t recognize the faces of many of the adults or girls in his life. When he is anxious, he describes the \u201cbugs in my brain [\u2026] their wings spinning, caught inside the glass hood of the lamp, vibrating in desperation\u201d (128) \u2014 and how his younger brother Jeremy helps calm him down. At times, I felt Baskin had airlifted certain passages straight out of my own brain. I brushed my teeth so roughly that I chipped off enamel and needed surface fillings. The other day, my friend stood right in front of me, and I didn\u2019t recognize her face, which left her asking \u201cAre you okay?\u201d to my blank stare and me admitting, \u201cProbably not.\u201d My anxiety feels like itching underneath my skin, inside my ears and my head. It is in the details that Nora Raleigh Baskin captures the experience of being on the autism spectrum.<\/p>\n<p>Right from the start, I can tell that Baskin isn\u2019t interested in writing the same tired trope of an autistic character unable to access emotions and feel compassion. Jason is deeply caring. His complicated yet loving relationships with his parents and younger brother, his willingness to help his peers at school even when they don\u2019t have his best interests at heart, and his desire to connect with a peer Rebecca through a young writers\u2019 website are some of the ways that Baskin subtly battles harmful stereotypes about autistic people lacking empathy and preferring isolation. Jason wonders, \u201cWhy do people want everyone to act just like they do? Talk like they do. Look like they do. Act like they do. And if you don\u2019t \u2014 If you don\u2019t, people make the assumption that you do not feel what they feel. And then they make the assumption\u2014 That you must not feel anything at all.\u201d (14)<\/p>\n<p>Baskin also manages to showcase Jason\u2019s talents without writing them as savant skills. Jason is a gifted writer and so much of the story centers on his relationship with words, time in an online writing community trying to befriend Rebecca, conflicts surrounding a creative writing convention, and the long story he\u2019s writing about a dwarf named Bennu. As Jason writes about Bennu\u2019s decisions to either fit in or remain unique yet misunderstood, he provides an inner glimpse into his feelings and highlights the messiness of pride, loneliness, disabled identity, and difference.<\/p>\n<p>Writing is having a voice. \u201cWhen I write, I can be heard. And known. But nobody has to look at me. Nobody has to see me at all,\u201d says Jason (3). Writing is a passion as well as a strategy that Jason employs to communicate with and connect to the outside world. With an abundance of stereotypes about the autism spectrum, language ability, and modes of thought, it\u2019s refreshing to meet an autistic character who\u2019s word-obsessed and literary. Jason is not <em>Thinking in Pictures <\/em>so much as <em>Thinking in Letters. <\/em>I\u2019ve spent more than my fair share of time spelling words and rearranging letters on signs in my head, and tracing words I heard in conversation on my pant leg or in the air. So I appreciate Jason\u2019s fascination with words. When Jason is sad and hurt, he can\u2019t make himself write at all: \u201cI never want to put words together, and sounds, and letters. That have meaning and that don\u2019t. Sounds like poetry and weapons. That hurt, and wound and lie, and those that fly. And soar. In which I find freedom. There will be no more.\u201d (167) He grasps his ability to make people understand more through writing. His writer\u2019s identity may be the most important identity he has. These details are specific, unique, and make Jason\u2019s character more than a stereotype. These details are where Baskin captures the autistic experience.<\/p>\n<p>Unlike relating to peers and behaving in \u201cappropriate\u201d ways, Jason knows he\u2019s good at language. He is proud of how others turn to him \u2014 and unaware that they are merely using him for his skills. He likes his language arts class at school \u201cbecause everyone asks me for help. \u2018Jason, can you fill in this last page in my vocabulary book?\u2019 Kids who don\u2019t ever talk to me otherwise. \u2018But make the handwriting messier so it looks like mine.\u2019\u201d (107) Two popular girls who were in my tenth grade LA honors class took an interest in sitting with me and I felt happy that they liked me, especially when I so often felt invisible and lonely. I didn\u2019t realize that they didn\u2019t like <em>me <\/em>so much as they liked the impact my understanding of \u201cBartleby, the Scrivener\u201d had on their group work grades<em>.<\/em> Jason captures pain of being socially na\u00efve and goodhearted.<\/p>\n<p>Jason\u2019s misunderstandings of relationships are much more realistic and worthwhile than the frustrating storyline that shows up in pop culture: a dorky awkward person with autistic traits magically reels in an appealing friendly partner (almost certainly of the opposite sex). Some may argue that Jason\u2019s failed relationships follow an autism stereotype \u2014 that we don\u2019t want, or can\u2019t have, romance or sexuality. Jason\u2019s online companionship does not blossom into the relationship he imagines it to be, and for me, this is a positive selling point. It does everyone a disservice to watch autistic characters easily find romance and friendship, when in reality relationships are often more difficult, especially for most of us on the autism spectrum. The book contains a feeling of hope that always has an undertone of sadness, and that comes in part from Jason\u2019s realism. Happily-ever-after wouldn\u2019t fit this book\u2019s narrative, but its ending is far from tragic.<\/p>\n<p>Three years ago, I wasn\u2019t ready to verbalize my beliefs about how to best work with kids on the spectrum or to share my personal experiences with my coworkers at the special education preschool. Thankfully, Baskin captured the essence in <em>Anything But Typical. <\/em>I wanted my fellow assistant teachers to understand, so I dog-eared the page corners and passed the novel around with an urgency. She got Jason so right in so many ways that he doesn\u2019t feel contrived for one second. Three major victories that Baskin accomplishes in <em>Anything But Typical <\/em>are:<\/p>\n<ol>\n<li>Jason Blake\u2019s story is not <em>only <\/em>about being autistic, but when it is about his autism, it feels believable.<\/li>\n<li>She demonstrates how some of Jason\u2019s obstacles are from his disability but others are from people mistreating him, a lack of understanding and acceptance of difference, and his environment. It doesn\u2019t feel like a \u201cmoral of the story\u201d or \u201cteaching moment\u201d, but examples of ableism, unacceptance, and frustration with impairment are woven into the natural progression of the story.<\/li>\n<li>The intimate portrayal of Jason\u2019s life completely shuts down prevailing stereotypes\/misbeliefs about empathy, emotions, and the autism spectrum.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>Certainly I understand why Baskin won the Schneider Family Book Award for this book.<\/p>\n<p>Although Baskin hasn\u2019t identified herself as being on the spectrum, her portrayal of Jason is more reflective of the autistic community than the typical portrayals in mainstream media. For that reason, I want to pass out copies to autism family members and future special educators, therapists, social workers, and disability program managers. Jason Blake\u2019s ASD is central to <em>Anything But Typical. <\/em>But, like in real life, autism spectrum disorder alone is never the whole story, and Baskin does a good job balancing Jason\u2019s autism with his writing life, family, school, and budding friendship. The details make him real. \u00a0Nora Raleigh Baskin has succeeded in creating an authentic autistic character who is anything but stereotypical.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Like in real life, autism spectrum disorder alone is never the whole story, and Baskin does a good job balancing Jason\u2019s autism with his writing life, family, school, and budding friendship. She&#8217;s succeeded in creating an authentic autistic character who is anything but stereotypical.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":55,"featured_media":4080,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_generate-full-width-content":"","kt_blocks_editor_width":""},"categories":[62,522],"tags":[174,140,64],"genre":[5],"age_category":[6],"disability":[7],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2091"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/55"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2091"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2091\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":7313,"href":"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2091\/revisions\/7313"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/4080"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2091"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2091"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2091"},{"taxonomy":"genre","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/genre?post=2091"},{"taxonomy":"age_category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/age_category?post=2091"},{"taxonomy":"disability","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/disabilityinkidlit.com\/test\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/disability?post=2091"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}