catherine morris, who wrote let me hear your voice and other hugely popular, a memoir about abba catherine, where she her daughter anne-marie as quote, wild in by her autism and is determined to assault those ramparts. robert hughes writes of, quote, the normal boy hidden just under the silent surface of his son walker and in a more much, more recent book, judy barron recounts, quote, we caught rare and fleeting glimpses of a helpless child trapped the bizarre behavior of shawn's autism. and we were determined to get him out. shawn and i have written the story of his release from the terrifying imprisonment, his own mind. so idea is in just so many autism memoirs and so half the book is just an analysis of where does this come from? doesn't reflect. i don't have to tell any of the parents in this room that this doesn't reflect anything biologically true about autism. so trace its emergence to psychoanalytic theory the middle the early kind of the mid third to mid 20th century and you know going forward and the second half of the book talks about how it says three case studies from our curr