Subject: "Bones"
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Posted on: 2011-09-18 21:42:00 UTC

Zach and Dr. Brennan from "Bones" are both Aspies, though only Zach actually has the diagnosis. There's been lots of talk (by the actors) about Dr. Brennan and how she would be diagnosed if the producers let her be--only they don't want to write a show that's about autism. (Somehow, if the main character has that diagnosis, then it's automatically a show about autism. Color me puzzled.) I've heard that Sheldon from "Big Bang Theory" is autistic, but I haven't seen that show.

There are a few books that specifically have an autistic character. "The Speed of Dark" is a near-future sci-fi book with an autistic main character; "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time" has a main character who's got Asperger's (but a pretty stereotypical case). Neither one is half-bad (though "The Speed of Dark" will really depress you).

Dean Koontz's "By the Light of the Moon" has an autistic character in it; like the other two main characters, the guy ends up with superpowers. The author handles it in a generally indifferent way, though Koontz has a bad habit of turning his disabled characters "inspirational" through the assumption that disability=bad.

Then there's the bad stuff. "The Secret of Susan", from Baby-Sitters Club, has an autistic savant character who is pretty badly miswritten until she goes to an institution because that's somehow better for her. And Diane Duane's "A Wizard Alone" has a supposedly autistic Darryl McAllister, but the actual disorder is really more of a dissociative disorder, having little in common with autism; and the magic cure doesn't help. Makes me sad, because she usually does her research really well.

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