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More Suspect Speaking

James Stephens

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Belletristik/Erzählende Literatur

Description

Following the success of The Suspect Speaking, More Suspect Speaking features another fifteen short short stories featuring people who have difficulty in spoken communication. People with aphasia.

Aphasia is the loss of a previously held ability to articulate ideas or comprehend spoken or written language, resulting from damage to the brain caused by injury or disease.

Rather than a biography or an academic text, these stories reflect the everyday experience of people with aphasia, their supporters and carers. They will see themselves or their loved ones.

The 15 More Suspect Speaking stories give a taste of what aphasiacs go through. More of the frustrations and blessings of life with aphasia.

Every day.

Every conversation.


Each story (except the last one) has three versions: A, B and C.

•The A version is people who have an effort or difficulty in reading. The sentences are compact, the layout is spacious, and descriptions are sparse - perfect for people recovering from the effects of aphasia.

•The C versions are for people who can read ('recovered' aphasiacs?) or people with aphasia who enjoy being read to - by carers, family members, supporters.

•Or, for non-aphasiacs, these stories contain an inkling of what people with aphasia deal with.

•The B versions are in-between. For some people with aphasia, re-reading the stories in their recovery could be therapeutic.

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Keywords

brain tumour, short stories, aphasia, speech language, therapists, brain injury, brain, language difficulties, stroke