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Saving Elijah [Bargain Price] [Hardcover]

Fran Dorf (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 5, 2000
A haunting tale of a mother seduced into an unearthly bargain.

Psychologist Dinah Rosenberg Galligan, securely married to her college sweetheart, Sam, is hurled into a waking nightmare when their youngest child, Elijah, falls into a life-threatening coma.

Amid the technological marvels of a major medical center Dinah meets the mysterious Seth Lucien. A vain, sexy spirit with a surprising connection to Dinah's troubled past, and a master seducer's awareness of her secret fears and regrets, Seth haunts the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit where Elijah dreamlessly sleeps. Claiming to know the future, he tempts Dinah with a simple deal: her son's life for the use of her body. What parent wouldn't willingly accept the trade?

Fran Dorf, a spellbinding writer of psychological suspense, pilots this Faustian tale with total assurance. Laced with unexpected humor and passion, Saving Elijah is at its core the story of a mother's love for her son, set against a struggle with faith, big-time grief, and what it means to be human.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Amazon.com Review

The clicks and beeps of cardiac monitors, the labored breathing of children struggling to survive--these are the sounds of a pediatric intensive care unit. They become the harsh counterpoint to the poignant melody of parental anguish that structures Fran Dorf's Saving Elijah. Dinah Rosenberg Galligan's 5-year-old son Elijah (whose young body is a cacophony of neurological glitches, learning disabilities, PDD, obsessive-compulsive disorder, a heart defect, and more) lies in a coma, and his parents must face the possibility of losing their beloved youngest child:
And how would I survive if every molecule in my body had been corrupted? I'm not sure when the molecule thing happens, as you carry a child or simply as you mother him, but I was sure that each of my cell nuclei was unalterably made up of four parts, one part me, one part Kate, one part Alex, and one part Elijah. If a crucial Elijah-piece of each cell nucleus were suddenly sliced off at the cellular level, I was certain the missing piece of each cell would defile the whole structure until, eventually, it crumbled to dust. I could feel edges crumbling already.
But then Dinah hears a mysteriously familiar melody: a version of the lullaby she has always sung to Elijah. When Dinah tracks it to its source, she sees a ghost. Playing the guitar and perching on a couch in the ICU waiting room, the ghost--that of the appropriately named Seth Lucien, Dinah's first lover--both taunts Dinah in her grief and invites her to rescue Elijah from the angel of death. The novel is essentially a reworking of the archetypal Faustian bargain: to what extent will Dinah go to save her son? Is the ghost a means of salvation or an instrument of torment? It leads Dinah both backward and forward in time: she must explore the failings of her past, and tread uncertainly the various futures that lie before her, some of them truly horrifying.

It will come as no surprise to any parent--or to any reader of Goethe--that Dinah accepts the ghost's proposition: her son will live, but she must live with the ghost forever within her. Elijah's stunning recovery from the coma grants him an uncanny ability to understand and empathize with the pain of others. He alone comprehends his mother's sacrifice as the rest of Dinah's life begins to disintegrate.

Dorf (Flight, A Reasonable Madness) has crafted a moving testament to maternal grief, which is at its most powerful when Dorf sets forth, in spare and eloquent prose, Dinah's fears, her anxieties, her crippling sense that she is to blame for Elijah's illness. But when Dorf dwells upon the metaphysics of the afterlife, or veers into lurid descriptions of the ghost's desire to "possess" Dinah, the writer's eloquence becomes turgid. Luckily, these moments are the exception. Saving Elijah is both delicately rendered and poignant. --Kelly Flynn --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Taking a chance with a heart-wrenching subject--a dying child, and a mother's guilt and desperation--Dorf (Flight) has produced a stunning third novel that crackles with suspense, dark humor, and provocative questions. Dorf, who lost her own son six years ago, explores the depths of maternal desperation in psychologist Dinah Galligan, whose five-year-old, Elijah--born with cognitive and developmental difficulties as well as myriad physical ailments--is in a coma in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit. In the hospital corridor, Dinah encounters a wise-cracking, guitar-playing ghost, who, she realizes later, is the spectral remnant of her first lover, Seth Lucien. Dorf draws Seth with an irreverent pen: his bloody, dirty, phantasmal body has the stench of decomposition; his mouth is dirty as well, slinging insults, mocking Dinah and blaspheming against God. In the grip of Seth's pervasive presence--he appears at unexpected moments in her home, her office and in her dreams--and as a result of the hidden secrets he forces her to face, Dinah's life falls apart. Her practice folds; her teenage children, Alex and Kate, recoil in shock; and her exasperated husband temporarily flees. Dorf forcefully validates Dinah's choice, for--because of the Faustian bargain she makes with the demon--Elijah emerges from the coma; and not only that, he thrives, newly possessed of prophetic powers. Whether Seth is an actual presence or merely a product of Dinah's imagined fears and guilty conscience, she is forced to face her inner demons, real and imagined, finding redemption with the help of her angelic child, a sympathetic rabbi and her steadfast husband. With sharply emotional description and unerring domestic dialogue, Dorf has created a compelling page-turner that turns a family tragedy into a spellbinding novel of psychological suspense, and meditates, with honesty and insight, on the nature of parental love and responsibility. Agent, Joni Evans. Rights sold in Germany; film rights optioned by Sydney Pollack. (June)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 389 pages
  • ISBN-10: 039914630X
  • ASIN: B000HWYLEW
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.3 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,565,542 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
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4 star:
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3 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars You won't be able to put this book down, July 29, 2000
This review is from: Saving Elijah (Hardcover)
How can a book both break your heart and lift your soul? It seems odd to say that you wish a book would never end when that book has taken you on the raw, stomach-turning roller coaster ride of one family's intensely personal experience with a child's devastating illness. But when you reach the final pages of "Saving Elijah," you feel as though author Fran Dorf has essentially enveloped you in a life-affirming hug, saving you as well. As Elijah's mother, Dinah is a remarkable character, strong-willed, loving, and incredibly fearless in meeting her terrifying personal demons head on. Her relationships with her husband, daughter, and, of course, Elijah, are portrayed so thoroughly and honestly, that you can't help but care for each one and root for them to find a peaceful, hopeful resolution -- you are not disappointed. Read this book if you've ever lost anyone who was a part of you. You will step off of this wildly dizzying ride shaken and exhausted, but, in the end, renewed.
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb read, June 5, 2000
This review is from: Saving Elijah (Hardcover)
The ways of God seems mysterious especially when a child is ill. Psychologist Dinah Galligan can only wonder why her five-year old son Elijah has suffered so much from physical and developmental problems. Now the lad lies in a coma in a Pediatric Intensive Care Unit.

However, the strangest twist of all comes when Dinah meets the ghost of her former lover Seth Lucien haunting the hospital's corridors. Soon Seth confronts Dinah wherever she is, forcing the despondent mother to face truths better buried in her subconscious. As Dinah begins to lose her grip on reality, her two older children and her spouse flee from her. Ultimately believing that Seth is real and not her imagination, Dinah strikes a bargain with the ghost: her body for her son. Elijah soon awakens from his coma with new abilities that appear supernatural.

SAVING ELIJAH is a taut psychological thriller that centers on a mother willing to sell her soul to save her child. The story line is exciting, intense, and yet often humorous as the reader wonders whether Dinah is losing her mind or actually consenting to a Faustian pact. Dinah and Elijah are intrepid charcaters and Seth (real or not) seems so devilishly tempting. The remaining family members cannot hide their exasperation or frustrations, rounding out a fabulous tale that should make Fran Dorf a household name.

Harriet Klausner

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A TOWERING ACHIEVEMENT OF DEPTH AND COMPLEXITY, September 4, 2000
By 
Peter T. Elikann (Boston, Massachusetts) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Saving Elijah (Hardcover)
There's a depth and complexity to this electrifying tale that is extraordinary. Superficial stories about the death of a child are such a common clichéd surefire staple of movie-of-the week tear-jerkers that it is both remarkable and stunning to see someone explore loss on such deeper levels of sensitivity and insight. By the time you finish this work, you'll feel like you've been on an exhilarating journey-- it is that rare that you read something that makes you look at things in ways you didn't anticipate and go in directions you didn't expect to take. It is true that Elie Wiesel said that today literature is exhausted. That's why when you come across something so peerless and energizing as Saving Elijah, it is not just rare--it is an event.

In a compelling bit of story-telling, the book starts out exploring how the impending loss of a child strikes the protagonist Dinah Rosenberg Galligan in every core of her existence, and not just by the obvious overwhelming grief and sadness, as she flails about drowning in helplessness. Bit by bit, in fits and starts, it begins to wreck her marriage, her career, her friendships. For example, it's unusual that a book investigates how a child's illness can bring together and then push apart a husband and wife. It does this with such a beautifully raw honesty, you almost feel like you should look away, but you can't. That's what is so remarkable about this book; it keeps looking at things from angles you're not assuming. Still, it moves even beyond this onto a spiritual plane.

One of the things I liked about the book was that it was exquisitely written by the prose stylist Fran Dorf with a rhythm and cadence all its own, alternatively slowing down and then speeding up, but always building and building. The plot concerns the Faustian bargain Dinah makes with a demon from out of her past. He will intercede with death on behalf of her son if she will give herself to him. The fact that she agrees tells you more than you ever need to know about a mother's love and courage for her child. But don't for a minute think that this is a supernatural tale on the level of a Stephen King book or even those incredible otherworldly/sexual yarns of Isaac Bashevis Singer. More important than this actual demon, Dinah must boldly confront and take on the "ghosts" of her past which have long haunted her and weighed her down. Notably, this is not a depressing or pessimistic work. Saving Elijah is an optimistic meditation on the doggedness of the human spirit. It is ultimately a towering book about redemption and hope.

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