Charlotte Moore has three children, George, Sam, and Jake. George and Sam are autistic. George and Sam takes the reader from the births of each of the two boys, along the painstaking path to diagnosis, interventions, schooling and more. She writes powerfully about her family and her sons, and allows readers to see the boys behind the label of autism/5(26). British journalist Moore brings a reporter’s eye and a mother’s love to this exploration of autism. The author’s two elder sons have autism, which afflicts roughly 1 in children. Their diagnoses came as a shock. George and Sam had seemed perfectly normal as . George and Sam: Two Boys, One Family, book by Charlotte Moore. Health Fitness Diseases Physical Ailments Books.5/5(5).
Charlotte Moore is a writer and journalist who lives in Sussex, England with her three sons. She is the author of four novels and three children's book. For two years she wrote a highly acclaimed column in the Guardian called "Mind the Gap" about life with George and Sam. She is a contributor to many publications. Charlotte Moore is a writer and journalist who lives in Sussex, England with her three sons. She is the author of several novels and children's books. For two years she wrote a highly acclaimed column in the Guardian called "Mind the Gap." She is a contributor to many publications. Charlotte Moore's autistic sons George and Sam are now 22 and Is there anything she would have done differently? Charlotte Moore and her three sons, George, left, Jake, centre, and Sam.
British journalist Moore brings a reporter’s eye and a mother’s love to this exploration of autism. The author’s two elder sons have autism, which afflicts roughly 1 in children. Their diagnoses came as a shock. George and Sam had seemed perfectly normal as babies, but autism is rarely diagnosed before 24 months. George and Sam describes Moore's life with her two autistic sons, George and Sam, and her non-autistic son, Jake. Given the need constantly to watch over them, and the years of sleep deprivation. George and Sam by Charlotte Moore has just been reissued by Penguin, with a new chapter and including the Mind the Gap columns originally published in the Guardian Topics Family.
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