Rebecca Schiller: How to Write a Literary Memoir About Neurodivergency
Hosted by Andrew Keen, Keen On features conversations with some of the world’s leading thinkers and writers about the economic, political, and technological issues being discussed in the news, right now.
In this episode, Andrew is joined by Rebecca Schiller, author of A Thousand Ways to Pay Attention: A Memoir of Coming Home to My Neurodivergent Mind.
Rebecca Schiller is cofounder and trustee of the human rights organization Birthrights and a regular contributor to The Guardian. She is also the author of Your No Guilt Pregnancy Plan and the children’s book Amazing Activists Who Are Changing Our World. On their small homestead in the English countryside, Rebecca and her family raise a motley crew of goats, geese, ducks, and chickens, and grow vegetables, fruit, and flowers to restore wildlife to the land. She lives in Kent, UK.
Strategic Hibernation: A Business Survival Guide for Turbulent Times
Italian Football: The Art of Defense and The Soul of a Nation
From Feudal Lords to AI Billionaires: Capitalism's Thousand-Year Conquest of the World
Why Football's Greatest Player Might Be Its Most Boring: The Problem (Yawn) of Lionel Messi
Maradona, Pele or Messi: Who is the Greatest Footballer of All Times?
All Sparta, No Athens: The Decline and Fall of Empires
Where Does Abundance Come From? How to Reinvent a Fairer Future in our AI Age
The Zakaria Paradox: Fareed Zakaria on the Triumph of Reactionary Politics in Our Revolutionary Post-Industrial Age
How American Eugenics Fueled Nazi Euthanasia: Psychiatry's Forgotten Complicity in the Holocaust
Chris Matthews on Robert F. Kennedy: Ten Reasons Why Bobby Still Matters
One Battle After Another in Hollywood: Why Gen Z Has Abandoned Cinema and What It Says About American Culture
Student Debt as Modern American Serfdom: A Mother Stole $200,000 in Her Daughter's Name
Keen on Hispanic America: How Latino TV Networks Reshaped American Politics and Culture