In our final discussion of Harry Bernstein’s The Invisible Wall, we rated the book, talked about major themes, and examined the characterization of his parents.
We’ll walk along with Jaouad as she’s diagnosed with leukemia at twenty-three years old, receives numerous rounds of chemotherapy and a bone marrow transplant over the next four years, and learns how to live again after doctors declared her cured.
I enjoyed listening to this recording because I could not make it live. I would have rated this book a 4 for all the reasons discussed. It contains important themes which you all outlined. Those themes not only have nuances of that period in time, but these cultural issues are still influencing the way of thinking in many families/persons today, so remain very relevant.
I enjoyed listening to this recording because I could not make it live. I would have rated this book a 4 for all the reasons discussed. It contains important themes which you all outlined. Those themes not only have nuances of that period in time, but these cultural issues are still influencing the way of thinking in many families/persons today, so remain very relevant.