The curious incident of the dog in the night time.

The curious incident of the dog in the night time.

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biggbn

Original Poster:

23,176 posts

220 months

Saturday 19th June 2021
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Stumbled across this the other day whilst looking for something to teach next term. What a funny, sad, well written book. No spoilers but it is written in first person as a character with aspergers and provides a valuable insight into the problems that some sufferers can experience. Easy read but recommended.

Edited by biggbn on Sunday 20th June 12:10

JapanRed

1,559 posts

111 months

Saturday 19th June 2021
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I read this about a decade ago. Agree it’s a good book.

Darkslider

3,073 posts

189 months

Sunday 20th June 2021
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Read it based on a recommendation from my secondary school English teacher, remember it being brilliant but haven't the foggiest what it was about so I guess that means I'm due a re read!

NNH

1,517 posts

132 months

Sunday 20th June 2021
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Great book, and to my surprise it was good on stage too

blueg33

35,774 posts

224 months

Sunday 20th June 2021
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Please don’t think it’s an insight into Aspergers. It may be an insight into one individual’s Aspergers that’s all.

My daughter has Aspergers Syndrome and it nothing like the character in the book. This type of high functioning Autism manifests itself in a wide range of behaviours.

biggbn

Original Poster:

23,176 posts

220 months

Sunday 20th June 2021
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blueg33 said:
Please don’t think it’s an insight into Aspergers. It may be an insight into one individual’s Aspergers that’s all.

My daughter has Aspergers Syndrome and it nothing like the character in the book. This type of high functioning Autism manifests itself in a wide range of behaviours.
Yes, agreed, sorry my post was badly worded, I will edit it.

blueg33

35,774 posts

224 months

Sunday 20th June 2021
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No need to edit it. My comment is on the thread and I’m not offended. Until you live with an Aspergers person and go through life with them, you can’t really understand. Some stuff is weird, some normal but no two are alike

Edited by blueg33 on Sunday 20th June 16:27

4Q

3,355 posts

144 months

Sunday 20th June 2021
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I listened to it as an audio book and loved it. The child actor reading the part of the main character was excellent.

Celt

1,264 posts

192 months

Friday 9th July 2021
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Half way through this and really enjoying it.

I have no experience of Aspergers. However the book has made me think how people that view the world differently are constantly having to adjust to how the majority view things or interact. A bit of empathy and understanding from the majority could make a big difference to people’s life’s.

Darkslider

3,073 posts

189 months

Friday 9th July 2021
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Darkslider said:
Read it based on a recommendation from my secondary school English teacher, remember it being brilliant but haven't the foggiest what it was about so I guess that means I'm due a re read!
Well bought a paper copy and got round to starting it Saturday morning. The easy narrative and simple reading meant I finished it the same day. As good as I remembered and I'm going to try a few others from the same author.

K50 DEL

9,236 posts

228 months

Monday 9th August 2021
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I'm clearly going to bat against the masses here then and say it's one of the least enjoyable books I've read, and in fact I only bothered finishing it as my Girlfriend at the time kept raving about it so I figured it must get better.

A while later I read "A spot of bother" by the same author which I thought was brilliant so I guess it's just a case that some books aren't for everyone.

TorqueDirty

1,500 posts

219 months

Monday 9th August 2021
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I thought it was clever but contrived.

Good but not brilliant, although obviously different enough to stand out and appeal to the reviewers. I could not put my finger on it at the time but now I'd say that all the hype was an early manifestation of "woke".

Having said that I will read it again and I might find that I have changed over the years and will really enjoy it.









Oakey

27,553 posts

216 months

Wednesday 11th August 2021
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Is that the one where his mother had killed his father and buried him in the back garden?

Pothole

34,367 posts

282 months

Wednesday 11th August 2021
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The stage show was superb at the Birmingham Hippodrome a few years ago.

biggbn

Original Poster:

23,176 posts

220 months

Friday 13th May 2022
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Oakey said:
Is that the one where his mother had killed his father and buried him in the back garden?
No, no 'murders' in this one, just a dead dog the main protagonist treats as a murder!

Skyedriver

17,812 posts

282 months

Friday 13th May 2022
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Still have the book somewhere, bought when it came out, was an award winner at the time - Whitbread?

Oakey

27,553 posts

216 months

Sunday 17th July 2022
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biggbn said:
Oakey said:
Is that the one where his mother had killed his father and buried him in the back garden?
No, no 'murders' in this one, just a dead dog the main protagonist treats as a murder!
I was thinking of Vernon Godlittle