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non-fiction at a glance 
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik 

We've all seen the headlines:
"Teenager in critical condition after car accident." Then, unless
there is a death, the story usually cools. Crooked Smile,
subtitled "One family's Journey Toward Healing," is all about what
happens next.
Lainie and Joel Cohen's son Daniel is injured
in an accident involving excessive speed and no seat belt: he has a
massive blood clot which has to be removed from his brain. After the
surgery comes a coma, and after that comes a painfully slow
rehabilitation.
The Cohens have the inestimable advantages
of a strong family and social network, education, income, an urban
environment, and enough support from friends and relatives to ensure
Daniel's daily physiotherapy. They have enough expertise to question
doctors' decisions, and to find the best rehabilitation possible. It
is frightening to know that all their privilege is not enough:
Daniel's younger brother experiments with drugs, his sister has a
physical collapse due to stress, and the Cohen marriage takes a
beating.
There are lessons to be learned from the Cohens:
Lainie finds strength in unexpected places, and she learns to take
an active role as a health-care consumer. She is also honest and
without self-pity, and we rejoice with the family as
Daniel-as-he-is-today takes his part in the circle - life is never
as it used to be, but now is accepted with gratitude.
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