ISBN-13: 9781439246306 / Angielski / Miękka / 2011 / 218 str.
John's near-death record is" Encouraged by the Light ."
"It is a good read from the very beginning." -Carolyn, John's friend
"I thank John for sharing his experience with me. It has surely made an impact in my life." -Katrina, administrator of a very popular website
John plunges you into the chaotic challenges occurring at the scene of the car accident. You immediately identify with the confusion, the critical head injury, and the resulting traumatic brain injury he sustained.
Dr. Jim, the emergency room doctor, can't get hold of either of John's parents. He needs permission to operate on John's face, provide medicine, and run tests.
However, the EMTs solve that problem. They incorrectly told the other parents which hospital they took their kid to. (They also left one of the kids at the scene of the accident.) The owners of the car John was in arrive and provide the needed permission.
John is patched up. When he is conscious he is delirious, otherwise he is comatose.
His mom finally gets word.
One would think all the drama would now subside, however it doesn't. Instead John suddenly finds himself in a normal conscious state, even though he is outside and above his own, physical body.
Although he is blind from two, huge, swollen, black eyes, John witnesses the conversation between his mother and Doctor Jim. He sees and hears them even though there is a really thick concrete wall between him and them.
Not long after that, yet another out-of-body experience occurs. This time he sees all the flowers he and his parents' friends sent. They are beautiful and later are the subject of a conversation between him and Mom.
On another occasion, while still in and out of a comma and delirium, John raises his arm; presents his hand; and rises up ever so slightly out of his body--so as to see each time his dad says, "John, you have a visitor. Can you take their hand and tell me who it is?" He identifies every visitor correctly.
Since his father has no way to explain such a phenomenon, he says, "I guess what they say is true, 'When a person goes blind, their other senses improve to compensate.'"
John also experienced an extended trip to another, wonderful place...
Hummm... Maybe you should just by the book.