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This memoir
captures Tada's heart and thoughts by portraying her walk with God
in the events, dialogues, memories, images, and scenes of her life.
She was paralyzed in a diving accident 33 years ago, and has since
founded Joni and Friends, an organization that reaches out to those
with disabilities.
From Publishers
Weekly
"Memory means everything to me," writes Tada. In this
tender, beautifully written memoir, she reflects with vivid detail
on the idyllic Maryland childhood that shaped her Christian faith
and the 1967 diving accident that left her a quadriplegic but showed
her that "there are more important things in life than walking."
As the youngest of four girls, Tada idolized her father and namesake,
Johnny, who instilled in her a daredevil sense of adventure and
shaped her view of God. When as a teenager she drifted from faith,
she prayed that God would turn her around. Tada believes the accident
she had at age 17 was God's response: "It wasn't some flip-of-the-coin
in the cosmos, some turn in the universe's roulette wheel. It was
part of God's plan-for me." She shares how her experiences
with suffering have given her a platform to encourage others with
disabilities through her speaking, writing, artwork and the organization
she founded to aid the disabled, "Joni and Friends." Intermixed
with humorous stories about her friends, marriage and professional
triumphs are vulnerable glimpses of her dips into depression, anger
and frustration over infertility. But, almost 36 years after "the
dive," Tada has learned that "true wisdom is found in
trusting God when you can't figure things out." Christian readers
should appreciate this mature, absorbing reminiscence of a remarkable
life. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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