Liz is the host for this week’s Nonfiction November prompt. The idea is to choose a nonfiction book and pair it with a fiction title with which it has something in common.

I came up with these two based on my recent reading:
An Autistic Husband
The Rosie Effect by Graeme Simsion (also The Rosie Project and The Rosie Result)
&
Disconnected: Portrait of a Neurodiverse Marriage by Eleanor Vincent
Graeme Simsion’s Don Tillman trilogy tells the odd-couple story of an autistic professor and how he falls in love with and marries a wholly unsuitable neurotypical woman. He turns this situation into romantic comedy. For Eleanor Vincent, it wasn’t so funny. She met her third husband, computer scientist Lars (a pseudonym), through Zydeco dancing when she was in her sixties. Though aware that he could be unemotional and act strangely, she found him chivalrous and sweet. They dated for a time but he hurt and confused her by asking for his apartment keys back. After a five-year period she calls their “Interregnum,” the two got back together and married. Despite their years of friendship, she was completely unprepared for what living with him would be like. “At the age of seventy-one, I had married a stranger,” she writes.
It didn’t help that Covid hit partway through their four-year marriage, nor that they each received a cancer diagnosis (cervical vs. prostate). But the problems were more with their everyday differences in responses and processing. During their courtship, she ignored some bizarre things he did around her family: he bit her nine-year-old granddaughter as a warning of what would happen if she kept antagonizing their cat, and he put a gift bag over his head while they were at the dinner table with her siblings. These are a couple of the most egregious instances, but there are examples throughout of how Lars did things she didn’t understand. Through support groups and marriage counselling, she realized how well Lars had masked his autism when they were dating – and that he wasn’t willing to do the work required to make their marriage succeed. The book ends with them estranged but a divorce imminent.
If this were purely carping about a husband’s weirdness, it might have been tedious or depressing. But Vincent doesn’t blame Lars, and she incorporates so much else in this short memoir, including a number of topics that are of particular interest to me. There’s her PTSD from a traumatic upbringing, her parents’ identity as closeted gay people, the complications around her father’s death, the tragedy of her older daughter’s death, as well as the more everyday matters of being a working single parent, finding an affordable property in California’s Bay Area, and blending households.
Vincent crafts engaging scenes with solid recreated dialogue, and I especially liked the few meta chapters revealing “What I Left Out” – a memoir is always a shaped narrative, while life is messy; this shows both. She is also honest about her own failings and occasional bad behavior. I probably could have done with a little less detail on their sex life, however.
This had more relevance to me than expected. While my sister and I were clearing our mother’s belongings from the home she shared with her second husband for the 16 months between their wedding and her death, our stepsisters mentioned to us that they suspected their father was autistic. It was, as my sister said, a “lightbulb” moment, explaining so much about our respective parents’ relationship, and our interactions with him as well. My stepfather (who died just 10 months after my mother) was a dear man, but also maddening at times. A retired math professor, he was logical and flat of affect. Sometimes his humor was off-kilter and he made snap, unsentimental decisions that we couldn’t fathom. Had they gotten longer together, no doubt many of the issues Vincent experienced would have arisen. (Read via BookSirens)
[173 pages]

The Ocean
Playground by Richard Powers
&
Rachel Carson and the Power of Queer Love by Lida Maxwell
The Blue Machine by Helen Czerski
Under the Sea Wind by Rachel Carson
While I was less than enraptured with its artificial intelligence theme and narrative trickery, I loved the content about the splendour of the ocean in Richard Powers’s Booker Prize-longlisted Playground. Most of this comes via Evelyne Beaulieu, a charismatic French Canadian marine biologist (based in part on Sylvia Earle) who is on the first all-female submarine mission and is still diving in the South Pacific in her nineties. Powers explicitly references Rachel Carson’s The Sea Around Us. Between that and the revelation of Evelyne as a late-bloomer lesbian, I was reminded of Rachel Carson and the Power of Queer Love, a forthcoming novella-length academic study by Lida Maxwell that I have assessed for Foreword Reviews. Maxwell’s central argument is that Carson’s romantic love for a married woman, Dorothy Freeman, served as an awakening to wonder and connection and spurred her to write her greatest works.
After reading Playground, I decided to place a library hold on Blue Machine by Helen Czerski (winner of the Wainwright Writing on Conservation Prize this year), which Powers acknowledges as an inspiration that helped him to think bigger. I have also pulled my copy of Under the Sea Wind by Rachel Carson off the shelf as it’s high time I read more by her.
Previous book pairings posts: 2018 (Alzheimer’s, female friendship, drug addiction, Greenland and fine wine!) and 2023 (Hardy’s Wives, rituals and romcoms).



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That’s quite a revelation about your stepfather. I’m glad your mother’s experience was easier than Vincent’s
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Given his age (73 at that time), he never would have been diagnosed, just considered ‘different’. He and my mother struggled a bit with communication and understanding each other’s mindset and motivations, but they were willing to do the hard work. They just didn’t get the time.
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Love these book pairings. Thanks for the inspiration!
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This is such a fun post to put together, I wonder why I haven’t done it every year.
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A super selection! I’ve added the book about Rachel Carson to my wishlist (and Week 5 post!) and of course that will be a good Liz-style pair with Silent Spring when I finally get to that.
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Quite academic and jargon-y, that, but short anyway; even if you skimmed you could get the main points. I’ve only ever read Silent Spring and I really want to read one of Carson’s sea books — that was really her passion.
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That’s a great pairing. We think our brother is on the spectrum, although he’s never been diagnosed as such. And my great nephew possibly is, too. My brother has a strange, inappropriate sense of humor and neither of them seem to be able to read the room, so to speak.
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Depending on his age, it’s probably to be expected that he hasn’t been diagnosed. It’s interesting how ASD affects people differently. My sister thinks my younger nephew is perhaps on the spectrum, which I wouldn’t have guessed because he’s outgoing and personable, but she says he processes things differently. My fault for stereotyping.
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My great nephew is outgoing, too.
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Disconnected sounds like a book I’d probably enjoy wrestling/arguing with. My partner M is autistic, and I don’t think it need be a death sentence for a marriage; as you say of your mum and stepdad, they were willing to do the work with each other. For us, it’s cemented the importance of clear communication, though this is something that pretty much every long-term relationship needs anyway. (In retrospect, and though armchair-diagnosing people isn’t on, I suspect most of the men I’ve had long-term relationships with have been neurodivergent, though all have dealt with it in very different ways and none until M has self-identified as such.)
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I don’t often find anything tempting on BookSirens, but this was a good’un. For sure, communication can be challenging for all kinds of reasons, but it’s easy to see why one partner’s autism would exacerbate it. It sounds like you have the right strategies in place. How uncanny that your boyfriends have all been neurodivergent. What’s your theory as to why??
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Honestly I have no idea why that seems to be my type. Other than maybe I am too and just don’t know it? I’ve taken a few of those self-diagnosis tests and my answers to so many of the questions are along the lines of “no, I don’t do that *any more* because I taught myself how not to”, which is… not helpful.
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How interesting! I would not have speculated that about you. We have a friend who tends to diagnose just about everyone (including me) as ASD — but I don’t see it. I’m told saying “on the spectrum” is considered offensive now (my neighbour who works in comms for a council said so)?
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The autistic pairing! I haven’t read that Rosie book yet but did read the others. The nonfiction book does go well. I could appreciate that lightbulb moment–a friend had that with someone close.
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I’ve been interested in autism for 15+ years; not sure why. Temple Grandin’s books are really eye-opening.
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Temple Granin was an avenue into the topic for me, too!
Elizabeth Moon’s The Speed of Dark (2002) was a key read too. When you see what awards it’s won/been nominated for, I bet you won’t be keen, but the story is almost entirely about relationships (and emerges from Moon’s mothering experiences).
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I’m intrigued!
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[…] Lida Maxwell – “Rachel Carson and the Power of Queer Love” from Bookish Beck’s Week 3 post. […]
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