

The Eagle Tree
Author: Ned Hayes
Narrator: Will Ropp
Unabridged: 6 hr 7 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download (DRM Protected)
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Published: 07/05/2016
Categories: Fiction, Family Life, Literary Fiction, Coming Of Age
Author: Ned Hayes
Narrator: Will Ropp
Unabridged: 6 hr 7 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download (DRM Protected)
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Published: 07/05/2016
Categories: Fiction, Family Life, Literary Fiction, Coming Of Age
Ned Hayes holds an MFA in creative writing from the Rainier Writing Workshop at Pacific Lutheran University. His historical novel, Sinful Folk, was nominated for the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Award. The Eagle Tree is based on his past experience working with children on the autistic spectrum and on family and friends he knows and loves. Hayes lives in Olympia, Washington, with his wife and children.
As a person on the autism spectrum, I especially love books with autistic narrators. I am always a bit wary when they are written by a neurotypical author. Will they write from the martyr parent position, the Rainman, or the Autistic Speaks puzzle piece perspective? Only a few manage the Autistic ch......more
The Eagle Tree by Ned Hays is about an autistic teenager’s love of trees. March Wong is fourteen years old and he lives with his mother, who occasionally struggles to cope with his behaviour. His favourite daily activity is climbing the local trees, with which he is both fascinated and concerned abo......more
I admit it. I have a problem with first person narratives by children. My problem is so great that I could not make it through Jonathan Safran Foer's highly regarded book, EXTREMELY LOUD AND INCREDIBLY CLOSE. The EAGLE TREE is narrated by 14 year old Peter March Wong. Peter, or March as he prefers t......more
“Every human experience is unique, but The Eagle Tree provides insight into one distinctive and uniquely important perspective. The descriptions in climbing the Eagle Tree gets deep into the mathematical pattern—based sensory world of a person with autism. The experience of navigating a tree climb is described in detail with mathematical and sensory detail that seems very authentic to me.” —Temple Grandin, Ph.D., author of Thinking in Pictures and Emergence: Labeled Autistic “The Eagle Tree is a gorgeously written novel that features one of the most accurate, finely drawn, and memorable autistic protagonists in literature. The hero of the book is like a fourteen-year-old Walt Whitman with autism, seeking communion with the ancient magnificent beings that tower over the landscape around Olympia, Washington. Ned Hayes plays with the conventions of the unreliable narrator so that you end up feeling like March is a very reliable narrator of glorious and terrifying aspects of the world that neurotypicals can’t see. Credible, authentic, powerful. A must-read.” —Steve Silberman, author of NeuroTribes: The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity and winner of the Samuel Johnson Prize for non-fiction. “A wonderful read! To say that the narrator’s mind is unusual would not be correct. His mind is simply and marvelously unique like yours and mine. Or rather, like yours and mine could be if we lifted the eyes of our hope to the crowns of trees and listened to the voice of our neglected spirit. The Eagle Tree will remind of the beauty and truth you may have forgotten.” —Francisco X. Stork, award-winning author of Marcelo in the Real World“The Eagle Tree portrays a teenager that is believable and lovable. March, the main character, is a living, breathing person with significant challenges who is so realistic I feel I know him. I have not enjoyed an autistic novel as much since The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time. The Eagle Tree’s beautifully written narrator is a real joy—March Wong is an unexpected leader, who remains true to himself and prevails. The Eagle Tree will leave an indelible mark on your heart.” —Susan Senator, New York Times featured author of Making Peace with Autism and Autism Adulthood