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TEMPLE GRANDIN by Sy Montgomery

TEMPLE GRANDIN

How the Girl Who Loved Cows Embraced Autism and Changed the World

by Sy Montgomery

Pub Date: April 3rd, 2012
ISBN: 978-0-547-44315-7
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin

The biography of an exceptional woman who, remarkably, made use of her condition to discover her calling and changed her own and many animals’ lives.

From earliest childhood, Dr. Temple Grandin, professor of animal science at Colorado State University, stood out with her “odd” ways. Her own father wanted to institutionalize his “retarded” child. Luckily Temple had friends who appreciated her creative mind and a mother who steadfastly believed in her and sought out schools, teachers and therapists who began to help develop her many talents, including a fierce intellect. A kindly high-school teacher led her to realize that her career lay in science. Today Grandin is a world authority and consultant on the respectful, humane treatment of animals raised for food and has designed groundbreaking facilities and equipment that protect livestock from fear and suffering—because her autism permits her to think the way animals do. (Animal lovers particularly may find some descriptions of ranching and slaughterhouse practices hard to take.)Montgomery makes a compelling argument that though one never outgrows autism, it doesn’t condemn those who have it to unproductive lives, and an appendix, "Temple’s Advice for Kids on the Spectrum," provides first-hand wisdom. Photos and diagrams depict Grandin's work as well as documenting her early life and career.

A well written, admiring and thought-provoking portrait.

(foreword by Grandin, index, facts about autism and factory farming) (Nonfiction. 10-13)