Talk:Gillian Grayson

Okay, I'm no expert, but I'm pretty sure there's no such thing as "borderline autistic." I think what whoever wrote that was trying to explain was autism spectrum disorder, which is a broad diagnosis category containing everything from Asperger's Syndrome to ADD. Maybe (I haven't read the book) this should say something like low-functioning ASD, or possibly high-functioning autism, if it's specifically stated that she's autistic.