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My bad cat attacks my futile fake flower arrangement.
Great Read for a Gray Day: Review of Animals in Translation

     Fido nuked your sofa? What was Fido thinking?
     Snowball minced your favorite chair? What was that all about?
     Animals in Translation, by Temple Grandin and Catherine Johnson, offers answers. In this national bestseller, the authors compare the thinking behind animal behaviors with the thinking behind human behaviors.
     Although Grandin is autistic, she holds a Ph.D. in animal science. She works with industry, the government, and teaches at Colorado State University. Johnson also holds a Ph.D. She is a writer specializing in neuropsychiatry.
     Grandin’s autism, she says, makes her think more like animals. That’s because autistics and animals, she says, rely on their strong visually-based perceptions, rather than language skills. In contrast, non-autistic humans, rely on their strong language-based conceptions.
     “The trouble with normal people is they’re too cerebral. I call it being abstractified,” Grandin says.
     Being abstractified in thoughts and sensory perceptions, she explains, non-autistic humans have trouble perceiving their environment, or “setup,” as it really is. Instead, they see “the abstract, generalized concept of the setup” they have inside their heads. In other words, they see their idea of the thing, rather than the thing itself.
     Being abstractified makes non-autistics miss things, sometimes very crucial things. But, it has its positive side. Non-autistics have the ability to generalize. Unconsciously, they sum up the details, then consciously make a decision and move on. In other words, they can see the forest for the trees. Autistics, on the other hand, cannot generalize. They get stuck in the trees.
     Animals in Translation tackles animal feelings and aggression, pain and suffering, and animal genius in nonscientific terms. The authors present fascinating research and real-life experiences between people and their pets, ranch animals, farm animals, even wild animals.
     For everyone interested in animal, and human, behavior, Animals in Translation, is easy to pick up, yet tough to put down. [templegrandin.com]

Spirited Greene County author Ann Mullen at a Madison Inn book signing.Great Read for a Gray Day: Review of What You See

     A little bit sassy, a little bit whimp, totally suburban Jesse Watson metamorphs when she comes in contact with the unaffected, hardy, sometimes crazy characters in Greene County, Virginia where she moves to be with her parents.
     There she befriends gun-strapping bikers, has an affair with a muscle-bound deputy, and takes a job with an audacious private eye. The search for a missing girl begins to quell her frailty and bring out the visceral best in Jesse, in this first of three books in Ann Mullen’s Jesse Watson Mystery series. What You See is where it all starts.
     A gray day’s a good day to curl up and get to know Jesse. [aftonridge.com]

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