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Following Ezra

What One Father Learned About Gumby, Otters, Autism, and Love From His Extraordinary Son

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A heartwarming, intimate, and amusing memoir of a father’s experience raising his autistic son.
 
When Tom Fields-Meyer’s son Ezra was three and showing early signs of autism, a therapist suggested that the father needed to grieve.
 
“For what?” Tom asked.
The answer: “For the child he didn't turn out to be.”
 
That moment helped strengthen the author’s resolve to do just the opposite: to love the child Ezra was, a quirky boy with a fascinating and complex mind. Full of tender moments and unexpected humor, Following Ezra is the story of a father and son on a ten-year journey from Ezra’s diagnosis to the dawn of his adolescence. It celebrates his growth from a toddler to an extraordinary young man, connected in his own remarkable ways to the world around him. And through Ezra’s eyes, Tom—and, in turn, the reader—gains a new and beautiful understanding of the world.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 1, 2011
      When their middle-son Ezra was 2, Fields-Meyer and wife Shawn (parents of two other boys, Ami and Noam) grew concerned about his unusual behavior. Ezra avoided eye contact, was non-communicative, and demonstrated serious difficulty coping with stimuli or engaging "normally." After he was diagnosed with autism the following year, Fields-Meyer and his wife worked with Ezra's teachers and friends to help him integrate into the wider world as much as possible. While Ezra struggled with aspects of social interaction (like tact), his gift for numbers, lists, and minutiae eventually allowed him to interact with people in ways his parents never expected. They never tried to force him into a mold of "normal" behavior, and everyone benefited from this approach. Fields-Meyer's touching memoir ends with Ezra's bar mitzvah, an event that both signaled the end of his childhood, and served as a benchmark of his ability to function in surprising ways. Neither terror nor saint, the charming Ezra's triumphs are more remarkable for their lack of super-human accomplishment, illustrating how ordinary families can persevere and thrive with love and patience.

    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2011

      A father celebrates his son's differences and advises others on how to view autism as a parallel journey rather than a restrictive label.

      Chronicling son Ezra's toddler years through his bar mitzvah, journalist Fields-Meyer (Business Mensch: Timeless Wisdom for Today's Entrepreneur, 2009, etc.) approaches autism from a topical perspective, creating a loving tribute that favors "following" his son's interests instead of imposing behavioral or social expectations. Subjects range from the initial diagnosis to Ezra's deep enchantment with animals, and from learning to read to the rewards and challenges of parenting a child who is spirited and unfiltered in his expressions. This is not the average medical memoir concerned with educating the public, nor does it trace a common tragedy-to-triumph trajectory; the author strongly emphasizes supporting Ezra himself over the condition. Advised early on to "grieve for the child he didn't turn out to be," Fields-Meyer quickly realized that there was nothing to grieve, and no sense of blame. Together with his wife and Ezra's brothers, he adapted to life at a slower pace, allowing frustration and wonderment alike to play out naturally. Characteristics of autism, which can include repetition, fixation, facial nuances, lessened eye contact and a superb memory for obscure minutiae are not treated as symptoms to normalize but as opportunities to enter Ezra's world—whether that means learning the running times of animated films or appreciating honest insights.

      Determinedly upbeat, the author depicts parenting with grace and every child as a gift.

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Booklist

      August 1, 2011
      In this sweet, funny memoir about his son, a former People magazine writer and editor manages to destigmatize autism better than any medical book has been able to do. His son, blessed with an amazing memory, asks people for their date of birth, then rapidly names a film released on that day: Movie-came-out-on-your-birthday-was Beauty and the Beast, ' November 13, 1991. But such anecdotes never get saccharine, since Fields-Meyer also gives the not-always-happily-ever-after denouement, in this case adding, The encounters are considerably less compelling when he discovers that an acquaintance was born in, say, mid-September or early January, annual lulls in animated movie releases. Another charming tidbit: In his acknowledgments, the author thanks his son for helping him pinpoint when an event occurred: That was in April of 2004, ' he'd say, a Sunday, three weeks after the release of Disney's Home on the Range.' If you ever consider writing a memoir, I highly recommend enlisting the help of someone with a superhuman memory. This is an uplifting book that can be highly recommended to parents of kids with autism.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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