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A Slant of Sun: One Child's Courage
A Slant of Sun One Child's Courage
Author: Beth Kephart
Named a Best Book of the Year by Salon magazine and The Philadelphia Inquirer, A Slant of Sun was praised for its incandescent prose about the experience of loving a child who brings tremendous frustration and incalculable rewards and for its extraordinary resonance. Like Operating Instructions and The Liars' Club, A Slant of Su...  more » is a contemporary classic.Nearly one in five children grow up facing a developmental or behavioral challenge, and like them, Beth Kephart's son, Jeremy, showed early signs of being different: language eluded him, he preferred playing alone to an afternoon on the jungle gym. Doctors diagnosed Jeremy with a mild form of autism called Pervasive Developmental DisorderNot Otherwise Specified. A Slant of Sun is a passionate memoir about how Kephart, guided by the twin tools of intuition and imagination, helped lead her son toward wholeness. Pulsing with the questions, "Is normal possible? Definable?" A Slant of Sun speaks to everyonenot just parentsof the redemptive power of love.
ISBN-13: 9780688172282
ISBN-10: 0688172288
Publication Date: 10/1999
Pages: 256
Rating:
  • Currently 3/5 Stars.
 9

3 stars, based on 9 ratings
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio Cassette
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

Bookfanatic avatar reviewed A Slant of Sun: One Child's Courage on
Helpful Score: 2
I am disappointed with this book. It could have been so much more. The author can write well. Not suprising since she's a ghost writer for others. She has a way with words. This book is poetic and well written. However, I can't recommend the book because I was left with an impression of how highly she thought of herself. Nearly every page is about how intuitive she is or how patient or loving. It's really about her and not as much about her son. It's quite a self-congratulatory book. She doesn't give a lot of details on how her son improved. He just did. She put him in a typical preschool with typical peers and he just got better to the point he was no longer autistic. I would hate to have other parents of kids on the spectrum think that's all there is to it.

This author doesn't believe in speech therapy, behavioral therapy, or occupational therapy. The vast majority of autistic children improve with a combination of those therapies. It would be a shame for the parent of a newly diagnosed child to think that their child will have the same result with just being in a typical preschool without any additional services. That's simply not the case. I would have loved to have known how the author's son lost his echolalia (tendency to repeat things). She is told by a professional that the boy has such severe echolalia that he will never lose it completely. Yet in a short span of time (2 years) he has lost the echolalia and is conversational. No explanations are given as to how that happened. It would have been nice to know.

She has no sympathy or connection with other parents of children on the autism spectrum. In fact, I don't think I even recall her talking to any other parent of a child on the spectrum! She doesn't seem to believe in proven therapies like behavioral therapy or speech therapy. There's a sense of smugness about the way she parents. Her book is about what a loving and tender mother she is. And she is that. She clearly loves her son. But her experience with autism is not at all like the realities that most autistic parents experience. I just couldn't get over how often she patted herself on the back.
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