Joan Ryan tells the powerful story of how her sons near-fatal accident, and his struggle to become whole again, gave her a second chance to become the mother she had always wished she could be.
Acclaimed journalist and author: Joan Ryans sports columns earned her thirteen Associated Press Sports editors Awards, the National Headliner Award, and the Womens Sports Foundations Journalism Award, among other honors. Her first book, Little Girls in Pretty Boxes: The Making and Breaking of Elite Gymnasts and Figure Skaters was named one of the Top 100 Sports Books of all Time by Sports Illustrated.
Medical drama: When Ryans sixteen-year-old son fell off of a skateboard, it wasnt obvious at first how serious his injuries were. With a journalists eye for the telling detail and the rhythms of a natural storyteller, she captures his medical ordeal as he lurches from crisis to crisisand with harrowing honesty and astonishing insight, relates her own journey through unknown emotional terrain.
A mothers story: Ryans son was diagnosed with Sensory Integration Dysfunction as a toddler; by the time he reached school age, it was clear that he suffered from ADHD and other learning disabilities. Though she loved him fiercely, she never stopped trying to fix him. When he is restored to her after his accident, she realizes she has the opportunity to be his mother all over againonly this time she lets go of the illusion of control. Now she not only accepts, but also embraces her son for who he really is.