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Books about people overcoming physical/mental difficulties, can anyone

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raccoon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-24-10 02:10 PM
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Books about people overcoming physical/mental difficulties, can anyone
recommend some? Such as:

THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN by Evans G. Valens (story of Jill Kinmont)

STILL ME by Christopher Reeve


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Journeyman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-24-10 02:23 PM
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1. Mark Vonnegut, "The Eden Express". . .
details his personal experiences with schizophrenia, which at that time he attributed to stress, diet and in part, drug use. The book is widely cited as useful for those coping with schizophrenia.

During this period, he lived mainly at a commune in British Columbia, some 18 kilometers by boat from the nearest road or electricity.

On February 14, 1971, he was diagnosed with severe schizophrenia and committed to Hollywood Psychiatric Hospital in Vancouver. Standard psychotherapy did not help him, and most of his doctors said his case was hopeless. Then Vonnegut went to the Brain Bio Center. "They fixed me up with embarrassingly inexpensive, simple, nonprescription pills," he later said. "Vitamins mostly."

Vonnegut first attributed his recovery to orthomolecular megavitamin therapy and then wrote The Eden Express. He subsequently studied medicine at Harvard Medical School and later came to the conclusion that he actually had bipolar disorder.

Son of the novelist and essayist Kurt Vonnegut, he is currently a pediatrician in Quincy, Massachusetts.
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FSogol Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-24-10 02:28 PM
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2. "The Unnamed" by Joshua Ferris and
if you are looking for a "can do whatever you put your mind to" book try "No Picnic on Mt. Kenya" by Felice Benuzzi. Its the true story of an Italian POW in a British POW camp in 1934 who decides to build some mountaineering gear, train a crew, and escape from prison to climb Mt. Kenya using a soup can drawing of the mountain as a map. Awesome book.
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Journeyman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-24-10 02:34 PM
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3. "American Miler: The Life and Times of Glenn Cunningham". . .
by Paul Kiell


When he was six, Glenn and his older brother Floyd had the chore of starting a fire in the schoolhouse stove every cold morning. One February morning in 1916, the kerosene container had accidentally been filled with gasoline. The stove exploded. Floyd was killed and Glenn's legs were so badly burned it was feared he would never walk again.

After several weeks in bed, he was able to walk on crutches. Finally, he got rid of the crutches but, as he said later, "It hurt like thunder to walk, but it didn't hurt at all when I ran. So for five or six years, about all I did was run."

Cunningham became a miler in high school and set an interscholastic record of 4:24.7 in his last race. He entered the University of Kansas in 1931 and won the NCAA 1,500-meter championships in 1932.

He was given the Sullivan Award as the nation's outstanding amateur athlete in 1933, when he won the NCAA mile, the AAU 800- and 1,500-meter runs, and set a world record of 4:06.7 for the mile in the Princeton Invitational Meet.

The AAU 1,500-meter champion from 1935 through 1938, Cunningham finished fourth in the 1932 Olympic event. In 1936, he put on a burst of speed in the third lap to try to break away from the field, but took a silver medal behind New Zealand's Jack Lovelock, who ran a world record 3:47.8.

In 1938, Dartmouth University invited Cunningham to try for a world record on a new, high-banked indoor track. Paced by six Dartmouth runners, he turned in an incredible 4:04.4, which would have been the indoor world record until 1955. However, the mark wasn't recognized because it wasn't run in sanctioned competition.

Because of circulation problems caused by his childhood accident, Cunningham needed nearly an hour to prepare for a race. He first had to massage his legs and he then required a long warmup period. Despite the fact that smoke bothered him, he turned in outstanding performances at Madison Square Garden, where he won 22 indoor miles.

Cunningham, who had a master's degree from the University of Iowa and a doctorate from New York University, retired from competition in 1940 and for four years was director of physical education at Cornell College in Iowa.
After spending two years in the Navy, Cunningham and his wife opened the Glenn Cunningham Youth Ranch in Kansas, where they helped to raise about 10,000 underprivileged children. A lay preacher, Cunningham periodically went on lecture tours to raise money for the ranch.

Born: August 4, 1909. Died: March 10, 1988.
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Captain Hilts Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-04-10 09:14 PM
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4. Polio victim Geoffrey Ward's "A First Class Temperament," about FDR. nt
Edited on Thu Mar-04-10 09:16 PM by Captain Hilts
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