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When My Heart Joins the Thousand

This was a book I had never heard of before.  I found it on Goodreads to fulfill a Facebook Bingo Prompt.  Upon reading the description I knew my heartstrings were going to be pulled.

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Synopsis (from Goodreads):
Obviously I’m not what most people would describe as happy. But that has nothing to do with anything. Happiness is not a priority. Survival is.

Alvie Fitz doesn’t fit in, and she doesn’t care. She’s spent years swallowing meds and bad advice from doctors and social workers. Adjust, adapt. Pretend to be normal. It sounds so easy.

If she can make it to her eighteenth birthday without any major mishaps, she’ll be legally emancipated. Free. But if she fails, she’ll become a ward of the state and be sent back to the group home.

All she wants is to be left alone to spend time with her friend, Chance, the one-winged hawk at the zoo where she works. She can bide her time with him until her emancipation. Humans are overrated anyway. Then she meets Stanley, a boy who might be even stranger than she is—a boy who walks with a cane, who turns up every day with a new injury, whose body seems as fragile as glass. Without even meaning to, she finds herself getting close to him. But Alvie remembers what happened to the last person she truly cared about.

Her past stalks her with every step, and it has sharp teeth. But if she can find the strength to face the enemy inside her, maybe she’ll have a chance at happiness after all.
 

I'm familiar with autism but this book is written completely in the mindset of Alvie.  Her abruptness and straightforwardness are refreshing, even though it can be very uncomfortable.  I hated reading about how she was treated at her job at the zoo.  When she's fired and disconnects from Stanley, she hits a low point that was hard to read.  I would have been better off breaking this up into parts, rather than the binge that I did.  This is definitely a book I would recommend to anyone needing to understand how autism works, or anyone needing to see through the eyes of someone with autism.

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