Thank you Bobby for the information. I met Joni a couple years after my  
accident, when she was speaking at a church in Shawnee Mission, Overland Park, 
 Kansas. She is beautiful and so extremely talented, it is amazing how much 
she  has accomplished in her life. She also had to fight breast cancer a 
few years  ago and there was a video on the Internet with her and her husband 
sharing this  experience.. I remember seeing, the other side of the mountain 
and it was so  encouraging to see her accomplishments and milestones, she 
accomplished in her  life. I believe she may have been one of the oldest 
living quadriplegic, but I  could be wrong. It would be fun to see those movies 
again. I encourage everyone  to see the Intouchables.
 
 
This is a great movie. I  think everyone will enjoy it.
Please forgive my Dragon errors.
 
 
quadriplegic is played by  Francois  Cluze
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0167388/
He  looks so much like Dustin Hoffman. It is unbelievable. 
 
 
His caregiver doesn't seem  like he can handle the job, but it is 
 
 
wonderful. He develops an  awesome relationship with his 
 
 
boss that changes both of  their lives.
 
 
_http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1675434/


Dana  C4-5, 38 years _ (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1675434/Dana C4-5, 38 
years has)   
____________________________________
 
From:  [email protected]
To: [email protected]
CC:  [email protected]
Sent: 6/25/2013 8:01:24 P.M. Central Daylight  Time
Subj: Re: [QUAD-L] SCI Novels


 

 
I've read a few that I'd like to pass along., One 

"My Soul purpose" by Heidi Van Beiltz  She became a C5,6  quadriplegic from 
a car accident while doing a stunt in Hollywood. She was a  stunning woman 
in Hollywood when she had her accident back in the late 1980s  early 1990s. 
She talks about her close relationship with Melanie Griffith and  also with 
Willie Shoemaker. Willie Shoemaker himself was a jockey, he was  involved in 
a single person car accident while drinking and driving he is a  C3,4 
Quadriplegic.
   Rating B+


"Joni" by Joni Erickison She became a quadriplegic in a diving accident  in 
1967. She does a lot of painting owns a radio station and runs a Christian  
ministry. She also has an amazing website that is definitely worth looking  
into. She wrote one book before she met her husband and wrote the second 
book  after she met her husband. She also has written about two or three other 
books  on Christianity disability.
   Rating A


"The Other Side of the Mountain Part One" by  E.J Valens It's a  story 
about Jill Kinmont who was trying out for the Winter Olympics and broke  her 
neck to C4,5 in 1955 She just passed away this year. There are two books  about 
her one before she met her husband and another one after. There's also a  
movie that was made about her life.
   Rating A


"The Other Side of the Mountain Part Two" by E.J.Valens Like I mentioned  
above this book is about when she met her husband and learning to live life 
as  a quadriplegic.She became a schoolteacher when she went to college  
inCalifornia.


Bobbie




Sent from my iPad

On Jun 24, 2013, at 2:37 PM, Don Price <[email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected]) >  wrote:




 
Jim shared his really cool list of movies featuring  quadriplegics: 
http://www.imdb.com/list/2OTqiWRR9R8/


Many  of those movies came from novels. I was wondering if any of you have 
read  any book regarding SCI [fiction or non-fiction.] I'd be interested in 
your  review, good or bad, regarding any SCI-related novels.


I  have a couple:


1.  The Dive From Clausen's Pier. Fiction. By Ann Packer. [Also a movie to 
add  to the list, Jim]
This  novel was riveting to me, at the beginning, because I was injured in 
a  diving accident and the details in this story were eerily similar; so  
similar, in fact, that my sister started reading this book but couldn't  
continue. However, the character with quadriplegia is really the secondary  
protagonist in this novel, so about halfway through it became much less  
interesting to me. Still worth a read if you need a  beach book this  summer.
Grade:  B-


2.  Moving Violations. Non-fiction. By John Hockenberry.
John  Hockenberry is an award-winning reporter who has worked for NPR, ABC 
and  NBC. John is paraplegic since a car accident at age 19, and this is his 
 memoir. I read this novel about five years ago and found it very  
entertaining. John discusses his adjustment to disability, his travels  around 
the 
world and some poignant inter-personal relationships. There's one  story 
involving his ex gf that is so unbelievable I still laugh to myself  when I 
think about it. The book suffers a bit by its length--at 350+ it  could have 
used a healthy editing--but overall it was a fun read.
Grade:  A-


3.  Will the Real John Callahan Please Stand Up? Non-Fiction. By John  
Callahan.
Most  of you are probably familiar with the work of cartoonist/quadriplegic 
John  Callahan. His cartoons are crude drawn, often vulgar and usually 
twisted.  But, damn, I find them funny! Not everyone will like his acerbic wit, 
but  this memoir is both tragic and uplifting. I'm looking forward to the 
rumored  film about his life (John died in 2010 and Robin Williams purchased 
the  story rights.)
Grade:  A




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