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Jennifer Briggs
Author
Watching Sarah Rise
Sarah is a feisty and determined four-year-old with autism and a unique genetic blueprint. Her mom Jenny is equally feisty and determined, which leads to clashes and strife but also leads to phenomenal connection and progress as Jenny runs a Son-Rise Program for her, calling it Sarah-Rise. The Son-Rise Program is an approach to working with people with autism to foster social connection. It provides intensely loving, focused one-on-one therapeutic play time, meeting Sarah where she is and never stopping her repetitive behaviors. Sarah’s language explodes, her eye contact intensifies, she plays games, plays imaginatively, uses the potty, eats healthily, reads, and writes. Playing with Sarah is deeply rewarding for the volunteers who spend time in the Sarah-Rise room. While Jenny sometimes doubts herself and criticizes her parenting, she also explores new pathways to gentleness, joy, and laughter. She celebrates Sarah’s successes, marveling at the depth of love and creativity that her volunteers bring to the scene and stretching her own creative self. Accompany Jenny from Sarah’s birth through the decision to run Sarah-Rise, and follow the years of Sarah-Rise, pretending that markers are flowers and number flashcards are snowflakes. Have your heart warmed and your socks knocked off by this momentous journey.
Reviews
Debut author Briggs shares her experiences with a cutting-edge therapy for autism that may offer hope to other parents of children on the spectrum. Briggs and her husband, Carl, knew that their daughter Sarah was developing differently from other babies. When Sarah turned one, she was diagnosed with a chromosomal condition (which Briggs doesn’t define) that often includes autism. When Briggs discovered The Son-Rise Program, an approach taught by the Autism Treatment Center of America (ATCA), she found hope in tailoring the program to her daughter. (One co-creator of the technique, Samahria Lyte Kaufman, pens the thoughtful forward.) The intensive one-on-one home-based therapy method includes focused therapy, including eye contact, child-led play, and interactive attention.

Briggs chronicles the highs that will inspire parents of children with autism—her non-verbal daughter speaking for the first time, followed by a rapidly expanding vocabulary; purposeful eye contact; Sarah mastering toilet training. She also lays bare her own insecurities about parenting Sarah and her neurotypical sister Amy: “It can be hard to imagine what it was like to have to teach your kid each tiny bit of every single thing,” she writes. She frankly acknowledges doubts and setbacks, encounters with medical professionals, and her own changing hopes and expectations, such as no longer harboring the wish that Sarah might one day “pass” as neurotypical. There’s also, as the title suggests, triumphs, joy, and breakthroughs.

Briggs writes movingly and with grace about the emotions parents of children with special needs face before marshaling their strength and actively advocating for their children and their future. She praises the volunteer teams she recruited to help deliver the therapy to Sarah, and rejoices in the progress and triumph her daughter achieves with her “village” of helpers. While she notes that the method doesn’t work 100 percent of the time, in every situation, Briggs’s journey transforms her daughter’s future, and her candor and insight will resonate with parents facing similar challenges.

Takeaway: Inspiring story of a mother’s fight to give the best life to a child with autism.

Comparable Titles: Heidi Mavir’s Your Child is Not Broken, Kate Swenson’s Forever Boy.

Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A-

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