Virtual Launch of Motherness by Julie M. Green

ECW Press

Claire Pokorchak - claire@ecwpress.com

oin us for an engaging online event to celebrate Julie M. Green's memoir, Motherness: A Memoir of Generational Autism, Parenthood, and Radical Acceptance. A reading will be followed by a Q&A with fellow author and editor of the book, Jen Sookfong Lee. Learn about the inspirations, challenges, and stories behind the book.

Register here: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_cH8haTqaS9Gb2OZJNS-xag#/registration

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A funny, unflinchingly honest, and deeply compassionate memoir about one woman’s experience of raising an autistic child while discovering she is also “on the spectrum”

Almost 10 years after learning that her son is autistic, Julie Green was also diagnosed, shedding light on a lifetime of feeling othered and misunderstood. Motherness traces Julie’s journey from childhood to early motherhood, when she must advocate for her son while navigating her own struggles.

With more girls and women being diagnosed in the last decade — many of them later in life — the face of autism is changing. Motherness provides a rich, intensely personal account of what it is like to be autistic, through the lens of both a mother and child. Topics include sensory processing, meltdowns and shutdowns, masking, empathy, alexithymia, bullying, elopement, special interests, disordered eating, gender diversity, twice exceptionality, and more.

Motherness is a story about accepting your child while learning to accept yourself. This extraordinary, groundbreaking memoir speaks to the great challenges and great joys of autism, providing valuable insights to parents of autistic children, adults newly diagnosed or questioning their place on the spectrum, and anyone seeking a greater understanding of neurodiversity.

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“Julie Green’s debut memoir Motherness is informative, offering interesting insights into a multi-faceted history of autism spectrum disorder, and it is also a deeply felt, personal account of what it is like to raise a neurodivergent child as a neurodivergent mother. But much greater than the sum of those parts, Green’s gorgeous writing carries this deeply human story, which is filled with curiosity, honesty, humour, and above all, love.” —Harriet Alida Lye, author of Natural Killer and Let It Destroy You

“Motherness is all about loving the child you’re raising and accepting the parent you are. A fiercely honest and wildly compassionate memoir.”—Ann Douglas, author of Parenting Through the Storm

“Motherness is powerful, thought-provoking, and frankly, impossible to put down. It left me questioning my own assumptions and considering how we can create a world where autistic individuals are truly understood, supported, and celebrated.” — Ingrid Smith, Parent Educator and Coach

“Motherness is that rarest of books—a memoir that looks inward but also out, shining a light on the personal in a way that refracts out to dazzle us all. In her unflinching and yet wholly tender focus on seeing—seeing and celebrating her child and then also, ultimately, seeing and celebrating herself—Julie Green has charted a path for all of us, parent and non-parent alike, to follow into a brilliant, better world.” —Amanda Leduc, author of Disfigured: On Fairy Tales, Disability, and Making Space

Julie M. Green is a Kingston-based writer whose work has been featured in the Washington Post, HuffPost, The Globe and Mail, Today’s Parent, and Chatelaine. She has appeared on CTV, BBC Radio, SiriusXM, and CBC Radio. She writes The Autistic Mom on Substack. For more information, visit JulieMGreen.ca.

Jen Sookfong Lee was born and raised in Vancouver’s East Side, and she now lives with her son in North Burnaby. Her memoir, Superfan: How Pop Culture Broke My Heart, was a finalist for the 2024 Forest of Reading Evergreen Book Award and the City of Vancouver Book Award, named a Best Book of 2023 by the Globe and Mail and Apple Books Canada, and was a TODAY Show Recommended Read. She is also the author of The Conjoined, nominated for International Dublin Literary Award and a finalist for the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize, The Better Mother, a finalist for the City of Vancouver Book Award, The End of East, The Shadow List, and Finding Home. Her forthcoming novel, The Hunger We Pass Down, will be published this fall. Jen acquires and edits for ECW Press.

Event Details


Start Date September 23, 2025
End DateSeptember 23, 2025
Time7:00pm - 8:00pm