As a child, John Elder Robison found it very difficult to make friends. He spent most of his time alone. "My social disability was dismissed as laziness, or deliberate misbehavior," he says on his website. "I dropped out of high school in the 10th grade."
His genius lay in all things mechanical; over the years, he designed special-effects sound gear for the rock band Kiss, and video games for a toy company. He now runs J.E. Robison Service, an auto business in Springfield, Mass., that specializes in customizing and restoring luxury cars. But that "social disability" of his youth remained, and it wasn't until he was 40 that he got a diagnosis: Asperger's syndrome.
Understanding that changed his life.
Coming, as he did, from a writing family (his mother is poet Margaret Robison; his brother is memoirist Augusten Burroughs), Robison began writing about living with Asperger's. His memoir, "Look Me in the Eye," published in 2007, was a New York Times bestseller.
His latest book ("Raising Cubby: A Father and Son's Adventures With Asperger's, Trains, Tractors, and High Explosives") explores his relationship with his son, who also has Asperger's. Robison will be the Talk of the Stacks speaker Thursday at the Central Library in downtown Minneapolis. Here, he talks about the grave responsibility of the writer, the trickiness of writing about one's family, and how autism might make him a better writer.
Q: Did writing your first book change your life?
A: Writing "Look Me in the Eye" put me out there in public view as a person with Asperger's who'd done OK. Temple Grandin and I were two of the first people to show that you could be successful because of something others saw as a disability.
My first book opened many doors for me. I was invited to speak all over the world, and to participate in cutting-edge research by neuroscientists, which will be the subject of my next book. That book also showed me the responsibility authors have when they write words that go beyond simple entertainment. To my amazement, "Look Me in the Eye" proved to be a big deal to readers who had family members on the autism spectrum, and their comments and questions made me understand that I need to put my very best quality of thought into anything I write.