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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wow! Read This Book!
I read Tuesdays With Morrie and was moved by the thought of a relationship rekindled - at a time when it still had a chance to matter to both individuals. I read Rescuing Jeffrey and was moved by much more than that. With riveting eloquence, one dad shares with all of us his horrific struggle to do what he thinks is best for his terribly injured son. Galli does not ask...
Published on June 20, 2000

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1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Human tragedy: A lawyer with nobody to sue
When I first starting reading this book my frame of reference was Christopher Reeve's book "Still Me", about the struggles of facing quadriplegia after a tragic accident. I found Mr. Reeve's book inspiring in many ways and disheartening in other ways. Mr. Reeve was wealthy enough, and had multiple insurance and disability policies to fund a private clinic in his own...
Published on March 10, 2006 by Cap't. Midnight


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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wow! Read This Book!, June 20, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Rescuing Jeffrey: A True Story (Hardcover)
I read Tuesdays With Morrie and was moved by the thought of a relationship rekindled - at a time when it still had a chance to matter to both individuals. I read Rescuing Jeffrey and was moved by much more than that. With riveting eloquence, one dad shares with all of us his horrific struggle to do what he thinks is best for his terribly injured son. Galli does not ask for our understanding or our support. He simply tells his story with brutal honesty. The book grabs you and takes you on an emotional journey from which you truly emerge a different person. You cannot put this book down, your tears wet the pages as you turn them, but you rejoice in Jeffrey Galli's own declaration that he wants to continue life's journey - even with the cards that now have been dealt him. While Galli argues with the system for the right to end his son's life, his account of those ten days reveals too many points along the way where he actually is searching for reasons to let that decision be Jeffrey's. In the end, Galli recognizes that, too. He probably knew it all along. He just was lucky enough to have a son who reminded him of it when it counted the most. This is a life-affirming narrative of the first order.
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I tried to put this book down. I couldn't., June 10, 2000
By 
Patricia A. Cox (Phoenix, Arizona) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rescuing Jeffrey: A True Story (Hardcover)
Reading Rescuing Jeffrey is almost like seeing a bad accident on the side of the interstate. You don't want to look, but you do. In this case, please do. While I often had to read through copious tears, it is a fascinating story written by someone who holds your attention despite your already knowing the ending. And, by reading, you find the truth: that one's mind and one's heart are the essence of the person . . . not what they can do. Jeffrey is the hero of this story. He decides, while everyone else agonizes, that he will live. This story will break your heart and then, slowly, as you think about it, heal it again.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A very honest and heart warming story., March 30, 2001
By 
Regina Milks (Rio Rancho, NM United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rescuing Jeffrey: A True Story (Hardcover)
I thought Resuing Jeffrey was a very honest story about when life deals you a rotten hand. Having gone through my own experience with my son who came down with Bacterial Meningitis and was left unable to move or speak at the age of 14 I can truly understand how Richard Galli was feeling. Not everything that goes through your mind is always pleasant. You are in store for so many things that you probably never though you would have to deal with. Rescuing Jeffrey made me cry because nobody knows how hard it is when it is your child. A very moving book.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Remarkably moving; unforgettable, September 20, 2000
This review is from: Rescuing Jeffrey: A True Story (Hardcover)
On July 4, 1998, 17-year-old Jeffrey Galli dove into a swimming pool. When he didn't emerge, his friends ran for help, and Jeffrey's mother and father pulled him from the pool and saved his life; subsequently they learn that he has been paralyzed from the neck down and will spend his life dependent on a ventilator for his breathing.

In this memoir of the first ten days of Jeffrey's accident and hospitalization, his father recreates the immense sadness, the horror, and the gut-wrenching decisions that his family faced. Chief among these was his own conviction that the most humane choice they could make was to turn off the ventilator and let Jeffery die in order to spare him a life robbed of any independent physical activity and without the potential to pursue their vision of a happy life. When Jeffrey awakes and is able to communicate--and has no brain damage--they rethink their decision and recognize there is more to being alive than having a body.

The family's struggle to decide on the best course of action for their son is the main focus of this book, and is presented so well that the reader feels the anguish of this horrible choice: to determine whether to keep your child alive, knowing that he will live completely wheelchair bound and dependent on others for the most basic care, or elect to let him die and live with that decision for life (and face the possibility that in the future a cure will be discovered).

Perhaps the most moving sections were when Jeffrey awoke each day and had to face his paralysis anew--his father there to explain to him time and again the circumstances and consequences of the accident. An incredibly moving read about parenthood and life--I dare you to read it without crying.

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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pooling Love, June 14, 2000
This review is from: Rescuing Jeffrey: A True Story (Hardcover)
"Rescuing Jeffrey" is a poignant real-life story about the human condition and the fighting spirit to live. It is a father-son story set against the backdrop of tragedy: on July 4, 1998, a 17 year-old boy dives into the shallow end of a pool, severely injures himself, is saved by his father, and then is taken to a hospital. That is when and where this extraordinary memoir by Richard Galli begins.

Depressing? Yes, at times. But "Rescuing Jeffrey" is not prelude to Prozac. It is, rather, a sober and realistic account of how a family - father, mother, son, and daughter - deals with an unimaginable affliction . . . the specter of a son fighting for life when the very meaning of his life is forever transformed. Throughout, there is no romantic false hope or exaggerated sentimentality. There is only love, but a love acutely aware of the cruelties of fate and the brutal demands of reality.

Reminiscent of the style and mindset of Albert Camus, Richard Galli has written a powerful and pondering account of eleven days that began with catastrophe and evolved into something remarkably unexpected. It is a story of how a father and son, a husband and wife, a community of friends, doctors, and rabbis all came together to confront the terror of tragedy. Galli's memoir is, without doubt, an affirmation of hope in the face of hopeless odds. "Rescuing Jeffrey" will not leave you depressed. No. It will leave you thinking about life and love and just how impossible is the former without the latter.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An array of emotions..., November 16, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Rescuing Jeffrey: A True Story (Hardcover)
A year after I sustained a spinal cord injury myself, I read Richard and Jeffrey Galli's story. I could relate to many of Richard's thoughts. He questioned Jeffrey's quality of life and wasn't sure if he wanted his son to live helplessly. I can truly say I hated some of Galli's opinions and statements... but the more I thought about it, the more they made sense. Galli speaks the truth; the brutal truth. He doesn't butter it up, but tells it how it is. At times I would get so discouraged that I made myself put the book down. I couldn't stay away long though. Galli frustrated me, brought me to tears, made me smile, and made me think. A good read for anyone who is in a similar position or knows someone who is. I admire Jeffrey's courage.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Something to think about, June 25, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Rescuing Jeffrey: A True Story (Hardcover)
This book is worth reading. It is a sad story, and unfortunately, a miracle does not occur at the ending, but is so good nonetheless. At times I could not even read more than a page because the images of Jeffrey in his hospital bed were so vivid that I began to cry. I agree with the other reviewer who said the true hero is Jeffrey. I think you should read this book because Jeffrey Galli's story will change your life. I can honestly say that it has changed mine.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A book you just can't put down!, June 30, 2000
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This review is from: Rescuing Jeffrey: A True Story (Hardcover)
This is a compassionate and compelling story, a must for everyone to read. I admire Mr. Galli and would never want to be in his shoes. I wept while I read, identifying very much as I have sons and he lets you know just how in a minute your world can change drastically. A must read for everyone. This is a poignant story, one everyone should read. When so many people gripe and complain about their so-called ailments, this book makes it very clear that but for the grace of God, there go I. Definitely worth purchasing! I recommend it to everyone.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars All doctors and most parents should read this, February 24, 2002
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To do justice to this book, read it with an open, searching heart. Then ask yourself, as this author did, what would YOU feel and what would YOU do if your child, an adolescent, was left paralyzed from the neck down? In those first days when your child couldn't even speak what would you think about? That's the painful situation author Richard Galli found himself facing after his son Jeffrey was paralyzed after a freak accident in a swimming pool, an accident which left him unable to move from the neck down.
This account is a heartfelt, painfully honest description of the first ten days after the accident (when Jeffrey is basically unconscious) and what many readers have found hard to believe is how Jeffrey's father could contemplate ending his son's life. But I understood how his understanding of the life his son had lived before the accident and the horror of the life his son would lead afterwards, in all their limitations, could lead him to contemplate his son's death.
In the end, it is Jeffrey himself who is the final determinant of his life or death. I won't give away the ending but simply recommend you read this one.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sharing Experiences, June 4, 2003
By A Customer
When my son was also injured in a diving accident in 1991 just pior to his 29th birthday, one of the counselors talked with me about the variances in each level of injury... and the variances within each level. This book relates totally ... and likewise, not at all. Such injuries do encompass such huge differences and yet still create huge bonds amongst SCI families and their friends. In 1991, I didn't have the availability of all the resources that can now be found so easily on the web... this improvement in availability is an additional tool in helping us learn and in helping us share/teach; alongside the medical improvements that increase the quality of life for those in wheelchairs. The wheelchair is what people see; the reality is so much more. As a mother, I appreciated reading the reactions from the other side of the parenting role... a father's honesty and truth... I know it was not easily exposed. Different angles of perception; same levels of love. Thank you, Jeffrey, as your father wrote... for sacrificing your privacy so he could tell the story.
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Rescuing Jeffrey: A True Story
Rescuing Jeffrey: A True Story by Richard Galli (Hardcover - March 31, 2000)
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