Description

Book Synopsis

There is a significant divide between autistic advocates and parents of autistic children. Parents may feel attacked for their lack of understanding, and autistic adults who offer insight and guidance are also met with hostility and rejection.

Meghan Ashburn, a mother of two autistic boys, and Jules Edwards, an autistic parent, were no strangers to this tension and had an adversarial relationship when they first met. Over time, the two resolved their differences and are now co-conspirators in the pursuit of disability justice.

This book unites both perspectives, exploring the rift between these communities and encouraging them to work towards a common goal. It provides context to dividing issues, and the authors use their experience to illustrate where they've messed up, where they've got things right, and what they've learned along the way.



Trade Review
I Will Die On This Hill offers practical, invaluable guidance interwoven with wisdom, humor, and raw honesty to emphasize how critical it is for autistic adults and non-autistic parents to cultivate mutual respect and find "common ground" despite having differing, and sometimes seemingly parallel perspectives. -- Morénike Giwa Onaiwu
I Will Die on This Hill is such a gift for all of us who have been clueless and way too speculative and assuming about autism. I can't guarantee that this is going to make you a better advocate-it might do that. But more importantly, Ashburn and Edwards' honest and unsentimental book will make you a better human being and, therefore, a better neighbor, better educator, better family member to Autistic adults, Autism parents and the children who need us all to do better. -- Marcie Alvis Walker, creator of Black Coffee with White Friends
If you work with autistic children or have an autistic child in your family, I Will Die on This Hill is the very next book you should read, and maybe the most important book you'll read in your life. -- Nick Walker, PhD, author of Neuroqueer Heresies

Table of Contents

1. If Only I Knew Back Then
2. A Different Lens
3. The Indoctrination of an Autism Mom
4. What a Relief!
5. Why are You Yelling at Me?
6. We've Heard it All Before
7. Misinformation Campaigns
8. It Doesn't Have To Be This Way
9. They're Worth It!
10. High Stakes Advocacy
11. Building Trust
12. In the Passenger Seat
13. Productive Conflict
14. In Autistic Space
15. Finding My Niche

I Will Die On This Hill: Autistic Adults, Autism

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£14.24

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RRP £14.99 – you save £0.75 (5%)

Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Thu 1 Jan 2026.

A Paperback / softback by Meghan Ashburn, Jules Edwards, Morénike Giwa Onaiwu

1 in stock


    View other formats and editions of I Will Die On This Hill: Autistic Adults, Autism by Meghan Ashburn

    Publisher: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
    Publication Date: 19/01/2023
    ISBN13: 9781839971686, 978-1839971686
    ISBN10: 1839971681

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    There is a significant divide between autistic advocates and parents of autistic children. Parents may feel attacked for their lack of understanding, and autistic adults who offer insight and guidance are also met with hostility and rejection.

    Meghan Ashburn, a mother of two autistic boys, and Jules Edwards, an autistic parent, were no strangers to this tension and had an adversarial relationship when they first met. Over time, the two resolved their differences and are now co-conspirators in the pursuit of disability justice.

    This book unites both perspectives, exploring the rift between these communities and encouraging them to work towards a common goal. It provides context to dividing issues, and the authors use their experience to illustrate where they've messed up, where they've got things right, and what they've learned along the way.



    Trade Review
    I Will Die On This Hill offers practical, invaluable guidance interwoven with wisdom, humor, and raw honesty to emphasize how critical it is for autistic adults and non-autistic parents to cultivate mutual respect and find "common ground" despite having differing, and sometimes seemingly parallel perspectives. -- Morénike Giwa Onaiwu
    I Will Die on This Hill is such a gift for all of us who have been clueless and way too speculative and assuming about autism. I can't guarantee that this is going to make you a better advocate-it might do that. But more importantly, Ashburn and Edwards' honest and unsentimental book will make you a better human being and, therefore, a better neighbor, better educator, better family member to Autistic adults, Autism parents and the children who need us all to do better. -- Marcie Alvis Walker, creator of Black Coffee with White Friends
    If you work with autistic children or have an autistic child in your family, I Will Die on This Hill is the very next book you should read, and maybe the most important book you'll read in your life. -- Nick Walker, PhD, author of Neuroqueer Heresies

    Table of Contents

    1. If Only I Knew Back Then
    2. A Different Lens
    3. The Indoctrination of an Autism Mom
    4. What a Relief!
    5. Why are You Yelling at Me?
    6. We've Heard it All Before
    7. Misinformation Campaigns
    8. It Doesn't Have To Be This Way
    9. They're Worth It!
    10. High Stakes Advocacy
    11. Building Trust
    12. In the Passenger Seat
    13. Productive Conflict
    14. In Autistic Space
    15. Finding My Niche

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