A friend is looking for a short story that fits the following parameters: "It's about an autistic girl who is with her mother at a convention, I think, and gets whisked away to Faerie by some kind of imp who implies everything will suit her, and in the end the girl comes back to her mother
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We found it! The guess above about Strange Horizons was right. http://www.strangehorizons.com/2013/20130902/rules-f.shtml
Thank you so much for helping me ask around.
On reread, I am not as impressed with it as I was the first time, so if people have better suggestions of short YA-oriented SF/F stories that feature great depictions of autism spectrum disorders, I too would really love to hear them. I'm trying to focus on better representation of various minority groups in the fiction I present to my students.
(Most of the big reading material is locked into the curriculum but I have control over smaller assignments, so I try to make the most of it. Especially since the majority of our student population is female and/or kids of colour. What these kids need with two years of depressing Jack London white-man-against-the-winter stories, I will never understand. Therefore: desi girls in wheelchairs conquering evil, amputee superheroes, and autism in Faeryland. Etc.)
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Steam-Powered: Lesbian Steampunk I and II, edited by Joselle Vandefhooft. (Disclaimer: I have a story in volume I.) A fair number of the stories would be fine for teenagers; the majority don't have any on-page sex, for instance.
All three of those anthologies are diverse in regards to disability, race, religion, sexual orientation, and ethnicity. I don't recall if any of them are about someone with autism, though.
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I'll look into the other two. Thank you muchly!
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Which of course you were doing at exactly the same time I was.
It's a YA novel (and late in a series) and so probably not useful to your class, but one of the better depictions of autism I've seen in SF/F is Diane Duane's A Wizard Alone.
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Fortunately torrain knew exactly which story I meant and furthermore knew where she was likely to have read it so, even though she didn't remember the author or title either, that made it findable.
This is why I crowdsource. :)
You're right about A Wizard Alone not working for my classroom needs right now, but I'll still look into it for myself. Thanks!
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Now, more than 40 years later, I can guess Ventolin would have worked better, but I was also rereading my translation of "White Fang" over and over as a small child and it helped me so much to have memories of a brave wolf instead of the memories of misery of not having access to enough air.
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Even more so, as I WAS a child who sometimes found it hard to understand what is actually asked from me (all these rules that are NOT meant to be followed exactly)
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