Brian Trapp is the author of
Range of Motion (2025). He is the director of disability studies at the University of Oregon, where he also teaches creative writing and serves as editor of the
Northwest Review. His work has been published in the
Kenyon Review,
Southern Review,
Longreads,
Brevity, and elsewhere. He grew up near Cleveland, Ohio, with his twin brother, Danny.
At Electric Lit Trapp tagged nine novels by authors who have "lived experience as either a disabled person or a caregiver—and each chose the novel and the comic mode to tell their tales." One title on the list:
A Room Called Earth by Madeleine Ryan
Plotwise, this 2020 novel sounds like a tough sell: a young Australian woman in Melbourne gets ready for a Christmas party, goes to the party, observes people, meets a cute guy near the bathroom, and goes home with him. But Ryan’s narrator,
who is on the autism spectrum like Ryan herself, is well-worth following into the night. Written in 60 short chapters, the novel’s special pleasure is the comic digressions that follow this neurodivergent character’s thoughts on everything from Heath Ledger to rules for witches. She feels disconnected from her own species, prone to getting overwhelmed, and more at home alone or with animals (especially her cat, Porkchop). Ryan’s character is a Allistic anthropologist, dissecting “normal” social situations with observations that are acerbic, whimsical, and profound. While Ryan dramatizes its social challenges, autism is not a pathology in this novel. It’s an alternative way of thinking—a vehicle for revelation and, yes, humor.
Read about
the other novels on the list at Electric Lit.
--Marshal Zeringue