Synopses & Reviews
Denny Graubart, child-narrator and "domestic surveillance expert," is having some terrible suspicions about his mother and autistic brother. It's the 1960s, aka the Diagnostic Dark Ages of Autism, and while his mother struggles to keep his brother out of an institution, signs of something more disturbing are beginning to emerge before young Denny's eyes. Battered by his own tragicomic sexual awakening during a long, hot summer, Denny will eventually find his most horrified suspicions about his family confirmed. A powerfully drawn portrait of two brothers locked into an asymmetrical childhood and a family struggling against a weight of medical ignorance, is "shockingly, electrically alive" (Phillip Lopate). It is also an indispensable bookend to Gottlieb's , which recounts the impact of autism on the same family from the other side, many years later, in the voice of a middle-aged autistic man.
Synopsis
Winner of the American Academy's Rome Prize for fiction, Eli Gottlieb's tender, harrowing coming-of-age novel finally returns to print.
About the Author
Two decades after his debut novel, The Boy Who Went Away, won the Rome Prize, Eli Gottlieb returns to the subject of autism in this inspired new novel. Gottlieb lives in New York.