Novels Feat. Special Needs Characters

“We are, as a species, addicted to story. Even when the body goes to sleep the mind stays up all night telling itself stories.”

(Jonathan Gottschall, The Storytelling Animal: How Stories Make us Human)

You can’t escape stories, they live everywhere.

We find them in books, TV shows, music, advertisements, jokes, anecdotes, love letters, emails, memories and places we haven’t looked yet.

Each new story, fictional or otherwise, can fill an empty space in our worldview with colour and detail or alter what existed there before.

Stories matter because all of us want to feel understood as individuals and as part of a community.

This certainly applies to the special needs community.

There’s nothing like a good book and a cozy spot at home to unwind during rare moments of downtime.

Have a glance at these three novels featuring special needs characters that we think everyone should read:

1. ‘The Memory Keeper’s Daughter’

by Kim Edward

David’s relationship with his wife, becomes rocky while their son must deal with their uneasy relationship and his own longing to know the sister he lost.

2. ‘Up High in the Trees’

by Kiara Brinkman

This book will make you cry.

Young Sebby Lane tragically loses his pregnant mother when she is hit by a car.
Already emotionally and sensory sensitive,Sebby’s father, Stephen, decides to take Sebby to their summer home, but there Stephen falls deeper into his mourning.

3. ‘Of Mice and Men’

by John Steinbeck

This classic story of two men—Lenny and George—one who has a child-like mentality but brute strength, the other who takes on the role as a father-figure to the other.

About Firefly

For Firefly, life is all about experiences and being face to face with friends and loved ones. By enhancing the child's perspective and giving them the tools to 'join in', the child not only has the opportunity to participate, but can also be at the heart of it.