What does it take to find your voice when the world has decided you don't have one?Born in Wilmington, North Carolina and diagnosed with autism at the age of two, Russell Je'Juan James was told he would never live a normal life. Never go to college. Never become a meteorologist. He couldn't speak in sentences until he was six years old.He proved every single one of them wrong.The Weather Inside is the unfiltered, deeply personal memoir of a man who grew up navigating foster care, bullying, a padded room in middle school, the grief of losing his father too soon, and a school system that didn't always know what to do with him, and who found, in the science of the sky, a language the world finally understood.From the Child Development Center in Wilmington to the campus of East Carolina University. From a weather radar obsession at age six to a Master's thesis on the sinuosity of landfalling tropical cyclones. From a radio archive of 6,800 jingles and airchecks to a live broadcast covering an EF-3 tornado, alone in the weather center for over an hourThis is not a story about overcoming autism. Autism is lifelong. This is a story about learning to live with it, adapt to it, and ultimately thrive, on your own terms.Featuring the author's signature Chapter Alert Scale, a weather-themed content guide rating each chapter from Category 1 to Category 5, The Weather Inside is as thoughtful about its readers as it is honest about its author.For every child still in the storm. For every adult still figuring it out. For anyone who has ever been told the path has to be straight to arrive somewhere worth going.The path does not have to be straight to arrive somewhere extraordinary.
AmazonPagina's: 139, Paperback, Independently published
Prijshistorie
* Prijshistorie bevat geen data van Amazon.
Prijzen voor het laatst bijgewerkt op: