Reviews tagging 'Ableism'

Adora and the Distance by Will Dennis, Marc Bernardin

3 reviews

xiphactinusfish's review

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0.25

This was foul. Autism is NOT A PLOT TWIST. The fact that this ableist fuckery got published is horrifying. Read something by an actually autistic author instead. 

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carleesi's review

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0.5

About 3/4 of the way through, I almost DNFed this because the plot was so confusing and the characters did not have depth and acted like we understood a bunch of dynamics that hadn’t been established. But I thought back to the prologue and pushed through because I thought something cool would be coming.

Instead. Wow. The author explicitly says he doesn’t want to write a story about himself as a parent of a child with autism and instead… assumes what it must be like to have autism? And constructs it as something to overcome, with a very weird binary about autism vs the world that won’t allow Adora to be autistic and happy. Just so much ableism in that ending.

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ellornaslibrary's review

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fast-paced

1.0

This isn’t inspirational, it’s problematic.

Honestly, I’m not even sure where to begin except to first say that if I read another review that uses the words inspirational or inspiring when describing this book, I might actually gag. While I am not autistic, I am disabled and this book is 100% an example of inspirational rhetoric. It's terrible and wrong, and certain communities are tired of seeing it pushed especially by people who have children that are considered part of those communities. I know autistic people, and have interacted in their communities, which is why I felt rage when I got to the end of this book. Autism is not something to be gotten through anymore than a disability is something to be overcome. And it most definitely is not a plot twist! That doesn’t even start to touch how awful the conversation is these adults are having while discussing this child.

Even before I got to the terrible reveal, I had almost DNFed this book cause the writing and plot wasn't good. It was rushed, there wasn’t any reaction to reveals like the character’s closest companion betraying her, they just moved on from character deaths like it was no big deal or made contradictory claims like acting upset people might die while going on about how people are going to die when others got upset as if they were being unreasonable, etc. but I’m glad I finished. Now I can tell people how awful this book is so they don’t read it to children - especially autistic children. There are better books out there for children regarding autism that aren’t insulting to autistic people. Some are even written by people who are actually autistic. I recommend checking those out instead. 

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