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Children with Emerald Eyes: Histories of Extraordinary Boys and Girls
S**N
One of the most moving, rewarding books I have read
I am a psychotherapist who works with children so this book had particular interest for me. With that said, Mira writes about her unconventional, absolutely brilliantly creative approach to working with "disturbed" children in ways that will deeply touch anyone reading her book. She could care less about diagnostic labels and her work with each child is geared strictly to that child - and these are children that most practitioners and doctors considered untreatable. Mira is an extremely genuine, direct and honest person who treated these children with respect. An amazing book.
J**S
Who would think a sweet loving child of five could also be criminally insane
I had read this many years ago (when my sister was taking psychology and loaned it to me) and wanted to read it again. It is a very disturbing book, because it deals with disturbed and insane children. Who would think a sweet loving child of five could also be criminally insane. This book is not for the faint of heart...its a true telling of some of the case files of Mira Rothenberg.I never found the reason for the title, however....Children with Emerald Eyes.
M**A
Five Stars
Great
D**N
I was thrilled to receive this book as I was ...
I was thrilled to receive this book as I was not sure it was still in print. It will greatly enhance research for my current book.
N**K
Five Stars
Excllent!
A**R
Five Stars
I was so happy to find this book on amazon. Terrific book.
B**4
The Times, They Are A'Changing
I share the concerns and doubts that another reviewer on the US boards have raised. While I admire Mira Rothenberg (who would later be credited for inspiring Thomas McKean, an author who has autism and who wrote "Soon Will Come the Light") for her dedication to her young clients, I, too found this book highly upsetting.For example, one young client, "Anthony" has an insensitive teacher who makes homophobic comments about him. In a total about face, that same teacher complains that Anthony ogles the girls in his class. Mira Rothenberg does not appear to challenge the sheer illogic in these two contradictory arguments. She also goes out of her way to taunt and blame Anthony during their sessions. I didn't like that at all.There were a number of things about this book that bothered me, such as when Mira Rothenberg expressed mysogenistic feelings and tried to avoid working with the girls. She even used strong expressions to describe how unattractive she thought one girl was. I also didn't like the chapter about "Peter," a young boy whose behavior was described as severely autistic.While I salute Mira Rothenberg for her utmost dedication to the children at the facility called Blueberry, I was horrified by the attitudes toward people with autism in the 1950s and 1960s. Fallacies abound; during those Dark Ages, it was commonly believed that autism was an emotional disorder as opposed to being a neurobiological condition. Even when I first read the book, I found myself tensing up at the parent blaming. As another reviewer on the U.S. boards aptly noted, Mira Rothenberg even taxes telepathy for the problems that the children at Blueberry have. In her chapter about "Danny," a child described as having severe autism, she seemed to feel that Danny had an extreme fear of death. She does appear to try to apply this theory to everything her autistic clients did. Danny is, by her own account her favorite charge.I first read this book when I was in high school, back in the pre-1990s Dark Ages when autism as viewed as a psychiatric condition. Even then, I found parts of this book hard to accept.As someone who is quite familiar with autism and who encounters it on a routine, daily basis, it was hard for me to read this (in our more Enlightened Era) without feeling anger. I didn't like the way she portrayed herself as the only person her clients could count on. I also didn't like the parent blaming either. I had a lot of trouble with "Chaim's" treatment, which included hypnotism. According to Mira Rothenberg, Chaim, a client she had in 1965 had been so traumatized by his own mother, Channa's experience during the Holocaust and that Channa was responsible for her son's condition. Whether or not he was autistic, as she describes him is open to question. One can't help but wonder if the children's parents were able to give any consent or offer any input where their children's lives where concerned.Blueberry closed in 1992. Asperger's has only been included in the DSM since 1994. The number of autism births has increased. As the other reviewer noted, this book has a plethora of drama and, what seems to me misplaced blame. If you are an adult with autism, have a child or other loved family member with autism, work with people who have autism, you will want to think twice before reading this antiquated book.
S**A
Think twice before reading if you love an autistic child
My feelings about this powerful book are quite mixed. On one hand, you have to have tremendous admiration for Mira, the author. She obviously cares extremely deeply for the children profiled here. She dedicates herself to them, working with them day and night and in some cases even taking them into her home. The world of special needs children needs people like her.On the other hand, I was quite upset by this book. This mainly was probably a case of changing times, as this book was written about the 50s and 60s, when thoughts were quite different about autistic children. But it's still a popular book, and I fear people reading it might be influenced by it. Mira overtly or not in most every case blames the parents somehow for the extreme problems of their children. At the end of the book it is even revealed that this damage to the kids might somehow be done by telepathy! She also seems to have a theory that autism has much to do with a fear of death, and most of the behaviors we see are attempts by the children to ward off death. She twists their actions to fit this.It would be impossible in today's world, with the explosion of autism, for children to get the intense treatment profiled here by anyone but their parents. However, after reading this, it makes you feel like for children such as this, getting away from their parents is the best thing---Mira seems to encourage children to see HER as the parent. As someone quite familiar with the world of autism, books like this leave me feeling very upset. If you are simply interested in a dramatic presentation of highly disturbed children, you will find that here. However, if you are the parent of an autistic child, you might want to think twice before reading this highly outdated book.
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