• Complain

James Reston - Fragile Innocence: A Fathers Memoir of His Daughters Courageous Journey

Here you can read online James Reston - Fragile Innocence: A Fathers Memoir of His Daughters Courageous Journey full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 2006, publisher: Crown, genre: Non-fiction. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

No cover
  • Book:
    Fragile Innocence: A Fathers Memoir of His Daughters Courageous Journey
  • Author:
  • Publisher:
    Crown
  • Genre:
  • Year:
    2006
  • Rating:
    3 / 5
  • Favourites:
    Add to favourites
  • Your mark:
    • 60
    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • 5

Fragile Innocence: A Fathers Memoir of His Daughters Courageous Journey: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "Fragile Innocence: A Fathers Memoir of His Daughters Courageous Journey" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

Fragile Innocence is the story of a child devastated by pure chance. This moving narrative of a fathers journey to understand and accept the profound changes in his daughters life is at once memoir, biography, mystery, and drama, all centered around one remarkable young woman who cannot talk or read or understand language, but who has touched almost everyone she has ever met.
At eighteen months Hillary Reston, a happy, healthy toddler, was struck by a remarkably high fever. On the advice of her doctor, her parents, James Reston, Jr., and Denise Leary, administered Tylenol and anxiously waited for the fever to subside. Five days later it did, but the damage was done. Over the course of the next five months their bubbly, highly verbal child was radically and irrevocably changed. Worse yet, no doctor could explain what evil and still unidentified force had stolen Hillarys ability to speak or understand language, hurtled her into a seemingly endless cycle of seizures, destroyed her kidneys, and taken her to the very brink of death.
For her parents, discovering what had happened to their child and how to assure the quality of her life became an obsession. This quest for answers would take them from the nations hospitals to the office of a pioneering geneticist in Texas and the vaulted halls of the National Institutes of Health.
This very intimate story also personalizes some of the most daunting ethical issues of medicine that society faces today, including stem cell research, animal organ transplantation, diagnosis with the Human Genome Map, and reproductive and therapeutic cloning. Hillary gives these immensely complicated issues a human face, and they are pondered by Reston as a reporter, a thinker, and a father.
In Fragile Innocence author James Reston, Jr., invites us inside his family, candidly sharing the joys and sorrows of raising Hillary.
This is a book about the first twenty-one years of a child named Hillary. It tells of her battle to live and our familys struggle to help her survive as best we could, after an evil and still unidentified force robbed her of her language at the age of two, hurtled her into a seemingly endless cycle of brain storms, destroyed her kidneys, and took her to the very brink of death. That is the first half of the story, when life itself was at stake. From the Preface

James Reston: author's other books


Who wrote Fragile Innocence: A Fathers Memoir of His Daughters Courageous Journey? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

Fragile Innocence: A Fathers Memoir of His Daughters Courageous Journey — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "Fragile Innocence: A Fathers Memoir of His Daughters Courageous Journey" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Contents Life Itself Quality of Life Fragile Innocence A Fathers Memoir - photo 1

Contents


Life Itself

Quality of Life


Fragile Innocence A Fathers Memoir of His Daughters Courageous Journey James - photo 2

Fragile Innocence

A Fathers Memoir of His Daughters Courageous Journey

James Reston, Jr.

Harmony Books New York for MAEVE Preface This is a book about the first - photo 3

Harmony Books

New York

for MAEVE Preface This is a book about the first twenty-one years of a child - photo 4

for MAEVE

Preface

This is a book about the first twenty-one years of a child named Hillary. It tells of her battle to live and our familys struggle to help her survive as best we could, after an evil and still unidentified force robbed her of her language at age two, hurtled her into a seemingly endless cycle of brain storms, destroyed her kidneys, and took her to the very brink of death. That is the first half of the story, when life itself was at stake.

The second half is different. While the threats to her life never completely vanished, the latter half is about the process of coming to grips with the damage that had been wreaked and the quest to solve the mystery of what had happened. And it is about the heroic efforts of many people, professionals and friends and a few strangers, to help her reach her potential. Ultimately, it is the story of her deliverance and redemption. And so this is memoir, biography, mystery, and drama, all centered in a remarkable person who cannot talk or read or understand language, but who has moved and touched almost everyone she has ever met.

As an innocent devastated by pure chance, Hillary has shown us the very meaning of courage. Without words and frequently with very little physical strength, she has demonstrated a strength of character and an eloquence that many a saint or silver-tongued spellbinder could envy. When the smallest gesture of sensitivity and awareness was shown her, she responded by spreading more love than anyone I have ever known. In Hillary charisma is personified.

The compulsion to write her story has been strong within me for some time. Other writers I admire, among them Reynolds Price, William Styron, Kenzaburo Oe, and Norman Cousins, have written wonderfully and usefully about grave crises in their personal lives, and so it seemed necessary at some point that I should attempt to do so as well. But the moment had to be right. And the story itself needed some sense of completion. There was never any assurance that Hillarys early life would ever find that resolution, or that we would ever ultimately come to terms with it. But happy events in the summer of 2002 changed that, and completed the circle. Those events, in a far-off and wondrous place called Iowa City, Iowa, allowed me, as it is sometimes said, to close the book.

If I was ready, I could only proceed with the help and sufferance of my wife, Denise Leary. At the most basic level, the mother always suffers and grieves and remembers more than the father. For many of those twenty-one years, I was often the observer high above the fray while Denise, down in the trenches, engaged in the real combat. She had as many or more professional challenges in her career as a lawyer as I have had as a writer. Regardless the mother has no relief, no refuge, no escape. Denise, along with Hillary, is the hero of the story. And to write Hillarys story, I was the observer twice over, for I was the man with the crowbar, as we forced open those misshapen boxes that had long since been closed and put away. For Denise, that was difficult, to say the least.

In the early years of Hillarys illness, we often wondered, angrily, why our child had been singled out, and why we, far from perfect perhaps, but good and decent people, had been cursed. We demanded an answer about the randomness of tragedy. Why us? we asked as if rationality guides the universe. We demanded to comprehend the incomprehensible.

There was precious little to read to impart greater wisdom. And so this book is offered for whatever it may provide to others in similar or worse situations. And the fact is that there are many, many families in far worse situations, families for whom there is no happy ending, no resolution, no redemption. There are many children with far worse infirmities and many families with far fewer advantages than Hillary and we have had. In the Dickensian charnel houses of our own county we have seen scores and scores of them. From these children the common instinct is to avert ones eyes. In Hillarys imperfections, by contrast to other families, we have been blessed. To those families and to those children, we offer our love and admiration, and our hope that by reading this they may find some profit.

Not everything about Hillarys life is told herein. Certain confidences are protected. That so much could be told is a factor of Hillarys own situation. I have not invaded her privacy, nor undermined her dignity as a human being, for she lives in the moment, on the evidence of her eyes about what transpires before her. She is an innocent, without embarrassment or guilt or remorse or resentment. I like to think that she would be pleased to have her story told.

Beyond its human qualities, her story should be told for an additional reason, one that I came to realize only gradually over the years. Her case personalizes some of the most daunting ethical issues of medicine that face us today: stem cell research, animal organ transplantation, the politics of human organ donation, genetic manipulation, diagnosis with the human genome map, and reproductive and therapeutic cloning. These issues are seldom considered from the vantage point of the consumer. Hillary is a potential consumerand beneficiaryof it all.

We sit now by a favorite stream in the Blue Ridge. She plies her joyous pastime of throwing sticks into the spring-swollen water of Fiery Run, turning to smile and squint her pleasure at me. To my eyes, she is lovely, and the scene is worthy of Wyeth. Her throaty, tremulous sounds are loud, but their loudness does not offend the countryside. Their warble reminds me of a distant night heron in the far woods. Healthy and solid at last, rosy-cheeked and bright-eyed, her life force is evident. She is making up for lost time.

FIERY RUN, VIRGINIA
MAY 2005

Acknowledgments

Fragile Innocence has been six years in the making. In 2000 I prevailed on my wife, Denise Leary, to begin talking about our life with Hillary, knowing that the process of reopening those careworn boxes, long since closed, would be difficult for her. Without her superb memory, the expression of her profound love, and her willingness to cooperate, I knew I would not be able to tell Hillarys story. At first, we talked only once a week. I was disciplined about ending the conversations after twenty minutes. This is, therefore, Denises book as much as it is Hillarys or mine.

After about a year, I laid the project aside. Our wait for a kidney transplant had stretched on and on into its eighth year. Without a transplant, without a diagnosis, there was no resolution to the story. But after the miraculous six weeks in Iowa during the summer of 2002, I felt that I could finish. It took me another three years of occasional and fitful writing to do so. In the finishing, my elder two children, Maeve and Devin, were distant enough in age at last to view their own experience with some dispassion, and they contributed importantly to the work.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «Fragile Innocence: A Fathers Memoir of His Daughters Courageous Journey»

Look at similar books to Fragile Innocence: A Fathers Memoir of His Daughters Courageous Journey. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Reviews about «Fragile Innocence: A Fathers Memoir of His Daughters Courageous Journey»

Discussion, reviews of the book Fragile Innocence: A Fathers Memoir of His Daughters Courageous Journey and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.