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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Culture -> 
The Running Dream
    2015-09-09  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    《奔跑梦》

    Jessica has run her personal best at a track meet — then there’s a tragic* bus accident and the high school junior loses her leg as well as her future dreams.

    From waking up in the hospital and coping with* the trauma*, to her return home, then school, she tries to grab her life back.

    On one level the story offers inspiration* to those dealing with physical changes in their own lives and the stages of recovery, fight, survival, and victory as Jessica reaches deep to push past her wall of self-pity and loathing, and moves beyond the “finish line.”

    On a deeper level, there is her blind discrimination* toward a fellow classmate who has cerebral palsy*.

    Rosa is hard to understand and easy to ignore. She is anchored to a wheelchair. Jessica, encumbered* by her crutches and her tender “stump,” is seated in the back of the class, out of the way, next to Rosa. She learns that the girl is smart, wise, and friendly.

    They pass notes and share lunch. Rosa writes, “I wish people would see me and not my condition.” When Jessica is running again — on a specially engineered prosthesis* — she challenges herself to help her friend be seen.

    How Jessica orchestrates putting Rosa in the forefront of a community race and pushing her wheelchair across a finish line is a study in faith and determination.

    Readers will cheer for Jessica’s recovery and be reminded to recognize people for their strengths and not overlook them because of their disabilities. The book is available on jd.com.(SD-Agencies)

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