| Description:
 
 "Alan's brain got run over by a speedboat," Cathy Crimmins writes. "That  last sentence reads like a bad country-western song lyric, but it's true. It was  a silly, horrible, stupid accident." And so begins the harrowing tale of a  family vacation gone awry when a speedboat collides with her husband's small  craft, changing their lives forever. Crimmins (The Seven Habits of Highly Defective  People and When My  Parents Were My Age They Were Old... or Who Are You Calling  Middle-Aged?) is used to writing with wit, self-effacing humor, and a warmth  that can bring readers to their knees--or at least to tears of laughter. But in  this stunning memoir about her husband's brain injury and the subsequent  fallout, Crimmins has outdone herself, bringing all her sharply honed narrative  skills into play as she tackles the life-wrenching drama of witnessing her  husband's near death and ensuing rebirth as a very different person.
   Crimmins takes readers inside the drama with all the right details and interior  feelings to keep us fully mesmerized: her 7-year-old daughter's ashen face, her  husband's twitching body, the paramedic's alarming question, "Is your husband  one of these people that ordinarily has large pupils?" As deftly as she takes  readers inside this personal story of not-quite recovery--more like  discovery--she is also able to pan back and show readers the comedic silver  lining (the self-important doctors, the moments of mishaps, and of course, the  whereabouts of the mysterious Mango Princess) that lies within the cloud of her  family's tragedy. Anyone who has endured a head trauma or loved someone who has  will be engrossed by this wise and knowledgeable storyteller. The rest of us  will have a captivating lesson about the rejuvenation of the brain as well as  the human heart. --Gail Hudson
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