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Thinking In Pictures: and Other Reports from My Life with Autism 
  by Temple Grandin 
                    
                    	
                    Paperback : 240 pages
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Introduction
Temple Grandin, Ph.D., is a gifted animal scientist who has designed one third of all the livestock-handling facilities in the United States. She also lectures widely on autism because she is autistic, a woman who thinks, feels, and experiences the world in ways that are incomprehensible to the rest of us. In this unprecedented book, Grandin writes from the dual perspectives of a scientist and an autistic person. She tells us how she managed to breach the boundaries of autism to function in the outside world. What emerges is the document of an extraordinary human being, one who gracefully bridges the gulf between her condition and our own while shedding light on our common identity.
"There are innumerable astounding facets to this remarkable book...Displaying uncanny powers of observation...[Temple Grandin] charts the differences between her life and the lives of those who think in words."--Philadelphia Inquirer
Oliver Sacks calls Temple Grandin's first   book--and the first picture of autism from the inside--"quite extraordinary, unprecedented  and, in a way, unthinkable."  Sacks told part of her story in his An Anthropologist on Mars, and in   Thinking in Pictures Grandin returns to tell her life history  with great depth, insight, and feeling. Grandin told Sacks, "I don't  want my thoughts to die with me. I want to have done something ... I  want to know that my life has meaning ... I'm talking about things  at the very core of my existence." Grandin's clear exposition of what  it is like to "think in pictures" is immensely mind-broadening and  basically destroys a whole school of philosophy (the one that declares  language necessary for thought). Grandin, who feels she can "see  through a cow's eyes," is an influential designer of slaughterhouses  and livestock restraint systems. She has great insight into human-animal  relations. It would be mere justice if Thinking in Pictures transforms the study  of religious feeling, too.
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