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Look Me In The Eye

John Elder Robison

Look Me in the Eye: My Life with Asperger’s

John Elder Robison

  • 51-page comprehensive Study Guide
  • Chapter-by-chapter summaries and multiple sections of expert analysis
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Look Me In The Eye Chapters 16-19 Summary & Analysis

Chapter 16 Summary: “One with the Machine”

In this brief chapter Robison describes his unique relationship to machines, explaining why he relates more easily to them than to people. Machines, he argues, follow a predictable pattern. They are logical. They are not malicious. In articulating the appeal of machines, Robison uses the analogy of a concert. The hall is dark and filled to capacity; the crowd is restless and potentially dangerous. Security watches for guns and knives in the huge throng of people. The sound and lighting engineers stand on a platform in the middle of the arena. The threat of violence is ever present, but once the show starts with the flick of a switch, the engineers are in control. Robison describes a delicate “dance” the engineers must perform to avert disaster—overloaded circuits that result in a blackout. Darkness, he says, is death; “that’s when they riot” (153). That control—over the equipment, the crowd, and even the band—is the ultimate aphrodisiac. He reflects, “There’s nothing like it in the world” (154).

Chapter 17 Summary: “Rock and Roll All Night”

In 1979 KISS embarks on its Dynasty tour with all-new equipment, effects, and costumes. Robison is building two new guitars, and as the start date for the tour approaches, he is still refining the electronics.

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