Dyslexia in popular culture

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of artistic depictions of dyslexia.

Films and television[]

Television series with dyslexic characters[]

Literature[]

Books[]

Percy Jackson series

Misc.

  • Hank Zipzer, the main character in the eponymous children's series by Henry Winkler, is dyslexic.
  • Maggie in Jennifer Weiner's novel, In Her Shoes (2002) is dyslexic. The novel was adapted to film (In Her Shoes) in 2005.
  • Jackie Flowers, a detective and lawyer in a series of detective novels by mystery writer, Stephanie Kane, is dyslexic.[4]
  • Will Trent, who is a Georgia Bureau of Investigation detective in Karin Slaughter's novels, is dyslexic.
  • Maeve Kaplan-Taylor, one of the five main characters in the Beacon Street Girls series, is dyslexic.
  • Bascule the Teller, a character from Iain M Banks' novel Feersum Endjinn, is dyslexic. Bascule's portion of the story is narrated in a semi-phonetic spelling that non-dyslexic readers may find difficult to parse, perhaps yielding insight into a dyslexic's world.
  • Stella Penn, character from Mark Peter Hughes' 'Lemonade Mouth'. Found out she has Dyslexia at the end of the book.
  • Mavis Elizabeth Betterly (May), the main character from 's novel in verse , must leave school partly due to her dyslexia, which sets in motion the events of the story.[5] is a 2013 ALA Notable Children's book.[6]
  • Ally Nickerson, a main character in by .
  • Wylan Van Eck, a character from the Six of Crows series by Leigh Bardugo, is dyslexic.

Comic books[]

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ "Back to School". Step By Step. Season 4.
  2. ^ "Road Trip". Step By Step. Season 6.
  3. ^ "Et in Arcadia". Victoria. Series 3. Episode 3. 27 January 2019. PBS/ITV.
  4. ^ "Stephanie Kane: Dyslexia". Archived from the original on 2019-01-16. Retrieved 2008-07-28.
  5. ^ May B, Kirkus Reviews
  6. ^ 2013 ALA Notable Books

References[]

External links[]

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