Reviews

Late Bloomer: How an Autism Diagnosis Changed My Life by Clem Bastow

liromar's review

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challenging emotional funny hopeful informative inspiring reflective fast-paced

3.5

uriah's review against another edition

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5.0

clem bastow you will always be famous 

mmmmmm's review

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3.0

this was a solid “not for me”. i LOVED the dino dinkuses, but i found this hard to get through just because tbh i was bored. do not doubt this is super valuable for other people tho!

sopsyjo's review

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funny informative medium-paced

4.0

maddydaisy's review

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funny informative reflective medium-paced

4.0

emmjaygib's review

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lighthearted reflective medium-paced

4.0

toeveryenemy's review

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hopeful informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

3.5

Late Bloomer: How An Autism Diagnosis Changed My Life is first of all, a great book because of how it looks. I mean, it's cover is shiny and glittery! Instant visual stim! also, a great surprise in the books:
THERE'S TINY DINOSAURS IN THE BOOK.
You can clearly see and read this was written by an Autistic person, and it was a delight to see how self-owned the book was. It was definitely full of personality, and it warmed me up to the possibilities the world could bring me if I was finally diagnosed and in a safe space where I could be with other autistic folk.
I'll keep dreaming about it until then. Thank you, Clem.

thecurbau's review

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5.0

This book has changed my life. On more than one occasion, I felt like Clem was writing about my own life and own experiences. It's... affirming. I've long felt that I've fallen on the autism spectrum, and while I'm not diagnosed as such, the similarities (especially within the final section which has various autistic people talking about their own experiences) to my own life make me feel I need to seek one out. Now, who's got a spare $3000?

smitchy's review against another edition

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5.0

Clem Bastow opens her life to us as she deals with the knowledge of a diagnosis of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) as an adult. Bastow, like a lot of women, was not picked up as Autistic as a child due to the fact Autism presents differently in women and girls than it does in men and boys. After a lifetime of feeling like she didn't quite fit in she sought out diagnosis in her 30s and in this book she looks back at her life and wonders what would have been different if she knew then what she knows now.
In the process she gives the reader an insight into what ASD is like from the inside. Sensory overwhelm, social confusion, work burnout from hyperfocus, gender roles, the risk of abuse due to not being able to read social cues, and how meltdowns feels from the inside are among the many topics Bastow covers in this articulate biography. She also includes short interviews with other people on the ASD spectrum at the end of the book for a wider degree of insight into the problems they face and the feelings they have to the disorder, the label, and the way they are seen and treated by the neuro-typical world.


I found this biography super interesting and it gave me a different perspective on ASD. I highly recommend it to anyone who has someone with ASD in their life and especially to anyone who deals with many people: like teachers, customer service, or managers.