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Animals in Translation: Using the Mysteries of Autism to Decode Animal Behavior | [Temple Grandin, Catherine Johnson]
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  • LENGTH
    11 hrs and 47 mins
  • AUDIBLE RELEASE DATE
    02-18-05
  • AUDIO FORMATS
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  • Thinking in Pictures: My Life with Autism
    Narrated by Deborah Marlowe
    Temple Grandin, Ph.D., is a gifted animal scientist who has designed one third of all the livestock-handling facilities in the United States. She also lectures widely on autism - because Temple Grandin is autistic, a woman who thinks, feels, and experiences the world in ways that are incomprehensible to the rest of us.
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Publisher's Summary

How is Animals in Translation different from every other animal book ever published? Animals in Translation is like no other animal book because of Temple Grandin. As an animal scientist and a person with autism, her professional training and personal history have created a perspective like no other thinker in the field, and this is her exciting, groundbreaking view of the intersection of autism and animal.

Unlike other well-known writers in the field of animal behavior, Temple Grandin is an animal scientist who has devoted the last 30 years of her life to the study of animals. Animals in Translation is the culmination of that life's work, a book whose sweep is huge, including just about anything that gallops, trots, slithers, walks, or flies.

Temple Grandin is like no other author on the subject of animals because of her training and because of her autism; understanding animals is in her blood and her bones.

Animals in Translation...

  • redefines consciousness and argues that language is not a requirement for consciousness;
  • categorizes autism as a way station on the road from animals to humans;
  • explores the "Interpreter" in the normal human brain that filters out detail, creating an unintentional blindness that animals and autistics do not suffer from;
  • applies the autism theory of "hyper-specificity" to animals, meaning that there is no forest, only trees, trees, and more trees;
  • argues that the single worst thing you can do to an animal is make it feel afraid;
  • examines how humans and animals use their emotions, including to predict the future;
  • compares animals to autistic savants, in fact declaring that animals may be autistic savants, with special forms of genius that normal people cannot see;
  • explains that most animals have "super-human" skills; animals have animal genius;
  • reveals the abilities handicapped people, and animals, have that normal people don't.

©2005 Temple Grandin and Catherine Johnson; (P)2005 Tantor Media, Inc.

What the Critics Say

"Philosophers and scientists have long wondered what goes on in the minds of animals, and this fascinating study gives a wealth of illuminating insights into that mystery....A lively and absorbing look at the world from animals' point of view." (Publishers Weekly)
"This fascinating book will teach readers to see as animals see, to be a little more visual and a little less verbal, and, as a unique analysis of animal behavior, it belongs in all libraries." (Booklist)

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  • 18 of 18 people found this review helpful.
    "Perhaps the best non-fiction book on Audible yet!"
    By James E. (Grapevine, TX, USA) Feb 26, 2005
    Whether or not you are an animal lover, Animals in Translation has something useful and fascinating for you. I selected it more for the autism angle than for the animal or the language perspective, yet I found new and useful facts on almost every "page" on these and other subjects. Grandin has a lot tell us about how the brain works, how to choose an appropriate dog breed, how horses can help troubled teens or how to calm a child or an animal. I can't recommend this book highly enough. I only wish I'd known some of these things when I had children and multiple animals. Oh, well, my cat will benefit from what I have learned...and now I am on a quest to learn more. I look forward to more from Grandin in the future.
  • 9 of 11 people found this review helpful.
    "Good content but poorly narrated"
    By Michael (The Woodlands, TX, USA) Feb 27, 2005
    I am a big animal lover but must say that I was disappointed with the book, not because of the content but because of the narrator who just seemed to want to rush through the book without taking a breath. The book is worth getting but not quite as enjoyable as it had the potential to be if it better narrated, however this is a personal choice for most people and no doubt others may have a different opinion to me on this topic.
  • 7 of 7 people found this review helpful.
    "Animals in Translation"
    By Allison (Mississauga, ON, Canada) Feb 19, 2005
    Excellent book! I now have a greater understanding of, and appreciation for, both animals and autism. The reading is also well executed by the narrator - there is a even, calm flow to her voice. This is definitely a book for all times.
  • 6 of 6 people found this review helpful.
    "Autistics and animals"
    By Rob (Durham, CA, USA) Nov 26, 2007
    My first 5-star rating!

    If you have an animal or an autistic person (or several of either/both) in your life, you will find this an informative book.

    I now have a better grasp on why my horse spooks at seemingly harmless things, and why my dog acts the way she does.

    Good content. Good narration.
  • 4 of 5 people found this review helpful.
    "painful and challenging to endure"
    By Jeff (Yorktown Heights, NY, USA) Apr 21, 2005
    i'm honestly astonished by all of the effusive reviews for this title. i was excited by the premise of the book, but found myself grimacing in pain after about one-half hour of listening time. i endured over 5 hours of the book, but sadly could not finish it.

    my principal problem is this: she is incomprehensibly self-important and self-aggrandizing. in the first hour of the book alone, she says the line "i couldn't understand why no one else could figure out what was so obvious to me. no one else can understand things like i can" over a dozen times.

    and remarkably, she doesn't restrict her arrogance to animal behavior alone. she offers anecdotes on how she is "smarter" than professionals in finance and economics (i predicted the "dot-com" bust based upon my dreams), congress (they're too "abstractified"), interior design (interior designers told me i'm a nightmare because i see everything that no one else notices), and award-winning psychologists ("as a girl of 18, I knew professor Skinner was absolutely wrong")

    it's too much. there isn't a 5-minute stretch of the book where she isn't patting herself on the back. is she really this insecure? or arrogant?

    i was also heavily annoyed by her penchant of inventing her own vocabulary. she spends the better part of a half-hour explaining that "normal" people are inferior because "most of us" are "too abstractified". i'm still trying not to wretch when i hear that word.

    if you enjoy and endless array of stories about problems with meat-packing plants related by a haughty and supercilious bore, then this is the book for you!
  • 3 of 3 people found this review helpful.
    "Might even be life-changing"
    By Amanda (Waynesboro, TN, USA) Oct 9, 2007
    Wonderful. Narrator does a fine job. And Grandin is extremely interesting.

    I've referred people to the book five or six times since I finished it. And may have to buy a print copy so I can find bits in a hurry.

    Over-long safety checklists are very high on Grandin's list of stupid things. What needs to be accomplished--she asks. Concentrate on that, not on 30 things that might or might not lead to that end. Especially if concentrating on the 30 make you lose sight of what you really want.
  • 3 of 3 people found this review helpful.
    "Must read for those who work with Autistics"
    By Robert (Great Neck, NY, USA) Aug 7, 2005
    I found this book very useful in helping to understand the behaviors of my autistic son who is now 16. Any who are with autistics as educators or family members would greatly benefit from reading this book. Highly recommended.
  • 2 of 2 people found this review helpful.
    "Autism in Translation"
    By Cather (Cumberland, VA, United States) Jan 18, 2007
    First of all, if you have a friend or family member who has any kind of Autism Spectrum Disorder, stop reading this review and just buy the book.

    A few people have complained about that author's self-important style of speech, but they need to remember that the author is, in fact, the best there is at what she does, and afflicted with a mental disorder that makes it hard to understand things like tact and modesty. She is equally blunt about her own faults, such as working memory.

    I do think the book could have used a better editor; there are many cases where the author repeats herself repeatedly, then says the same thing again. Again, this is an autistic habit, but a neurotypical editor could have caught that. In the meantime, you can make a game out of the use of certain phrases. ("Famous Experiment! DRINK!!!")

    On the other hand, there is much in here to understand about the way animals think, the way neurotypical people think, and that half-way point that seems to be the home of the autistic spectrum disorder. To be honest, I just wanted the autism information, but the rest was at least interesting enough to keep me from fast-forwarding.
  • 2 of 2 people found this review helpful.
    "eye opening"
    By Nicole (new york, NY, USA) Dec 9, 2005
    a truly fascinating look at how animals think and why they engange in the behaviours that they do. not only for the animal lover, this book has interesting insights into human behaviour as well, and how we relate to animals *as* animals. also, it's read my one of my two most favorite ever readers: Shelly Frasier. listen to anything she reads, and it will be fascinating and wonderful.
  • 2 of 2 people found this review helpful.
    "Fantastic"
    By Ingrid (Hudson, MA, USA) Nov 16, 2005
    This book is totally fascinating. I learned so many amazing things listening to this book, and gained so many insights, I can't recommend this book enough. Some ideas are rehashed a couple of times, but I also learned that this is the nature of an autistic, so that's cool. All animal lovers should read this and learn from it.

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