1st Edition
The Subtle Spectrum: An Honest Account of Autistic Discovery, Relationships and Identity
Preface Identity First Language Trigger Warnings Chapter 1. Introduction Chapter 2. Mapping Experiences of Being a Diagnosed Autistic: More of a Doodle than an Ordinance Survey Map Chapter 3. Travelling from Autism Awareness to Autistic Identity Chapter 4. Fragments of Difference Chapter 5. Reflections on Difference Chapter 6. Fragments of Awareness Chapter 7. Moving Between Difference and Awareness Chapter 8. Diagnosis Chapter 9. The Report Chapter 10. Blog Part One: The First Weeks after Diagnosis Chapter 11. Reflecting on the Impact of Diagnosis on my Identity Chapter 12. Blog Part Two: The First Months after Diagnosis Chapter 13. Reflection Chapter 14. Blog Part Three: Half a Year after Diagnosis Chapter 15. Reflection: History Repeating Chapter 16. Love Across a Neurodiverse Divide Chapter 17. Reflection: Interoception Chapter 18. Emotional Connection Chapter 19. Pregnancy Chapter 20. Special Interests Chapter 21. Reflection: Recognising the Impossibility of Change was Crucial Chapter 22. To be Identified is Our Pride Bibliography
Biography
Joanna Grace is the founder of The Sensory Projects and works as a sensory engagement and inclusion specialist. She has been a special school teacher, a foster carer and a support worker for people with disabilities and neurological diff erences. She grew up on a boat at sea and now lives in rural Cornwall close to the ocean that she loves. Joanna is autistic.
This wise and compassionate book provides a roadmap toward what author Jo Grace wonderfully calls 'a small private place, unseen by the outside world, a hidden gem' -- to personal acceptance of oneself as autistic, and the discovery of autistic community, in a world built for non-autistic people. It's engaging and uplifting reading for anyone on the spectrum, and for readers who want to comprehend the nature of autistic experience.
Steve Silberman, author, NeuroTribes: The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity 
Grace writes with candour and intensity and this book supports those currently looking to claim an autistic identity as a definition of self, ‘like a handrail you grab when trying to stand unaided’.
It will also be of value to those working with adolescents and adults with a diagnosis of autism.
Mary Mountstephen, SEN Magazine






