Skip to main content

Joe

Author
Michael Blasland
Genre
Media
Book
Publisher
Jessica Kingsley Publishers
ISBN
9781861979612
Reviewer
Jayne

Synopsis

A little boy sits at the top of the slide, oblivious to the restless queue snapping behind him. He stares into space... and sings. In a hardware store, he plonks himself on a display toilet amidst the throng of customers and wees, wearing little more than a serene smile. He thumps crying babies. He is amazed, as he hurtles skyward, when the car he runs in front of actually hits him. Joe is ten and mentally disabled. He exists in a lonely bubble of misunderstanding and occasional calamity. He's funny, fascinating, maddening. He has strange, unexpected talents and his life is a catalogue of the bizarre. This book tells his moving story, but it also argues something more, something brazen, preposterous even: that Joe is a profound lesson in our own humanity, and that until we get to know his unusual, eventful life, we can't fully understand our own. Drawing on philosophy, developmental psychology, evolutionary theory, literature and medical research, this thought-provoking inquiry shows how we, in contrast to Joe, are equipped to negotiate life. The Only Boy in the World, by his oddity and isolation, makes luminous so much that we take for granted: how we are instinctive mind-readers, how we perceive the physical world around us, how we make sense of other people, how we understand guilt and innocence. Running throughout is an unsettling question: if Joe sets our humanity in such sharp relief, can we still say that he is part of it? If he shows by what he lacks all that is most remarkable in us, is he still one of us? The author who asks that outrageous question is Joe's father. In confronting it, the Only Boy in the World finally suggests an answer to what truly makes us human.

 

 

Review

This is the story of a little boy named Joe who stops on a slide and sings oblivious to the queue snapping behind him. This remarkable book tells Joe's Story but it also argues something audacious that until you know Joe's life, you can't really understand your own;that his misadventures teach us nothing less than the people-ness of people.

Through his strangeness, Joe makes normality luminous; how we make sense of others, what we mean by guilt and innocence, how we perceive our surroundings. All of which invites an outrageous question; for if Joe sets everyday humanity in such sharp relief,how is he still part of it? The author who asks is Joe's father. And the book is his answer - the families struggle to get help and support through their child's strange behaviour.

This book is wonderfully written and I must say he has captured the real struggle that parents go through and the embarrassing moments of living with a child with Autism.

divider

 If you enjoy what we provide, please consider making a donation.