Naoki Higashida was born in Kimitsu, Japan in 1992.
Diagnosed with severe autism when he was five, he subsequently
learned to communicate using a handmade alphabet grid and began to
write poems and short stories. At the age of thirteen he wrote
The Reason I Jump, which was published in Japan in 2007. Its
English translation came out in 2013, and it has now been published
in more than thirty languages. Higashida has since published
several books in Japan, including children's and picture books,
poems, and essays. The subject of an award-winning Japanese
television documentary in 2014, he continues to give presentations
throughout the country about his experience of autism.
David Mitchell is the author of seven novels, including
Cloud Atlas, The Bone Clocks, and, most recently, Slade
House. KA Yoshida was born in Yamaguchi, Japan, and
specialized in English poetry at Notre Dame Seishin University. KA
Yoshida and David Mitchell live in Ireland with their two children.
"One of the most remarkable books I've ever read. It's truly moving, eye-opening, incredibly vivid."--Jon Stewart, The Daily Show
"Please don't assume that The Reason I Jump is just
another book for the crowded autism shelf. . . . This is an
intimate book, one that brings readers right into an autistic
mind--what it's like without boundaries of time, why cues and
prompts are necessary, and why it's so impossible to hold someone
else's hand. Of course, there's a wide range of behavior here;
that's why 'on the spectrum' has become such a popular phrase. But
by listening to this voice, we can understand its
echoes."--Chicago Tribune (Editor's Choice) "Amazing
times a million."--Whoopi Goldberg, People "The Reason I
Jump is a Rosetta stone. . . . I had to keep reminding myself
that the author was a thirteen-year-old boy when he wrote this . .
. because the freshness of voice coexists with so much wisdom. This
book takes about ninety minutes to read, and it will stretch your
vision of what it is to be human."--Andrew Solomon, The
Times (U.K.) "Extraordinary, moving, and jeweled with
epiphanies."--The Boston Globe "Small but profound . . . [Naoki
Higashida's] startling, moving insights offer a rare look inside
the autistic mind."--Parade "Surely one of the most
remarkable books yet to be featured in these pages . . . With about
one in 88 children identified with an autism spectrum disorder, and
family, friends, and educators hungry for information, this
inspiring book's continued success seems
inevitable."--Publishers Weekly
"We have our received ideas, we believe they correspond roughly to
the way things are, then a book comes along that simply blows all
this so-called knowledge out of the water. This is one of them. . .
. An entry into another world."--Daily Mail (U.K.)
"Every page dismantles another preconception about autism. . . .
Once you understand how Higashida managed to write this book, you
lose your heart to him."--New Statesman (U.K.)
"Astonishing. The Reason I Jump builds one of the strongest bridges
yet constructed between the world of autism and the neurotypical
world. . . . There are many more questions I'd like to ask Naoki,
but the first words I'd say to him are 'thank you.'"--The
Sunday Times (U.K.) "This is a guide to what it feels like
to be autistic. . . . In Mitchell and Yoshida's translation,
[Higashida] comes across as a thoughtful writer with a lucid
simplicity that is both childlike and lyrical. . . . Higashida is
living proof of something we should all remember: in every autistic
child, however cut off and distant they may outwardly seem, there
resides a warm, beating heart."--Financial Times
(U.K.)
"Higashida's child's-eye view of autism is as much a winsome work
of the imagination as it is a user's manual for parents, carers and
teachers. . . . This book gives us autism from the inside, as we
have never seen it. . . . [Higashida] offers readers eloquent
access into an almost entirely unknown world."--The
Independent (U.K.) "The Reason I Jump is a wise, beautiful,
intimate and courageous explanation of autism as it is lived every
day by one remarkable boy. Naoki Higashida takes us 'behind the
mirror'--his testimony should be read by parents, teachers,
siblings, friends, and anybody who knows and loves an autistic
person. I only wish I'd had this book to defend myself when I was
Naoki's age."--Tim Page, author of Parallel Play and
professor of journalism and music at the University of Southern
California
"[Higashida] illuminates his autism from within. . . . Anyone
struggling to understand autism will be grateful for the book and
translation."--Kirkus
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