Reflection — “The Mirror in the Story”
There is a quiet kind of magic that happens when a child sees themselves on the page.
For autistic children, that moment can be rare—too rare.
Too often, the stories they are given to read are mirrors that fog when they lean in close, pages that almost reflect them but not quite. Characters are flattened into stereotypes or erased altogether, their brilliance and beauty distilled into misunderstanding.
But children deserve stories that feel like home.
They deserve to see their way of moving through the world honoured, not corrected.
They deserve to find characters who flap their hands in delight, who find safety in patterns, who love deeply but differently—and to know that these ways of being are not broken, just beautifully specific.
When autistic children read books that reflect their lives, something sacred happens: belonging.
They begin to understand that the world has room for them. That they are not strange for needing quiet. That their way of thinking—their honesty, their attention to detail, their sensitivity—is not something to hide but something to celebrate.
Representation is not decoration; it is recognition.
It tells a child: you exist, and your existence matters.
And in a world that too often tells autistic children to mask, to shrink, to be less—books become a gentle rebellion. A place where they can rest in truth, unedited. A place where they can be fully known.
Now more than ever, we need those stories—because belonging cannot be assumed; it must be built.
Because when autistic children see themselves on the page, they begin to imagine futures that include them.
And that imagining, that quiet seed of self-acceptance, can grow into the kind of confidence that changes everything.
This is one reason why I write what I do. For the other two reasons, come along to the book fayre tomorrow (poster in previous post) and find out from me.