Dyslexia in popular culture

This is a list of artistic depictions of dyslexia.

Films (cinema and television)

Television series with dyslexic characters

Literature

  • Percy Jackson - Percy Jackson & the Olympians series of books
  • Annabeth Chase - Percy Jackson & the Olympians series of books
  • All of the Demigods - Percy Jackson & the Olympians and Heroes of Olympus series of books
  • Jackie Flowers, a detective and lawyer in a series of detective novels by mystery writer, Stephanie Kane, is dyslexic.[4]
  • Maggie in Jennifer Weiner's novel, In Her Shoes (2002) is dyslexic. The novel was adapted to film (In Her Shoes) in 2005.
  • Hank Zipzer, the main character in the eponymous children's series by Henry Winkler, is dyslexic.
  • Moose Mason in Archie Comics is dyslexic.
  • Taki Matsuya, a mutant character from Marvel Comics, (1988–present), is dyslexic.
  • Cassandra Cain, a previous version of the super-hero Batgirl, is dyslexic, sort of. From birth she is taught to read the world in movement, as a plan to make her an unstoppable martial artist. She has appeared in comic books published by DC Comics since 1999.
  • 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 Caroline Starr Rose's novel in verse May B, must leave school partly due to her dyslexia, which sets in motion the events of the story.[5] May B is a 2013 ALA Notable Children's book.[6]
  • Ally Nickerson, a main character in Fish in a Tree by Lynda Mullaly Hunt.
  • Wylan Van Eck, a character from the Six of Crows series by Leigh Bardugo, is dyslexic.

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

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