Saving Elijah
by Fran Dorf
List Price: $25.95
Pages: 384
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 039914630X
Publisher: Putnam Publishing Group
Psychologist Dinah Rosenberg Galligan is living every mothers nightmare:
her youngest child, Elijah, has fallen into a life-threatening coma. Faced
with a seemingly hopeless situation, Dinah meets the mysterious Seth Lucien,
a spirit with a surprising connection to her past. Lucien promises to
help Elijah emerge from his coma but at a devastating cost: the miracle
comes only after Dinah enters into a Faustian bargain; her son is saved,
but her entire world begins to crumble
At its core, Saving Elijah is a gripping literary tale of a mothers
love set against a struggle with faith. Laced with humor and passion,
the novel confronts a multitude of psychological and philosophical issues,
from the forces that bind a family together, to the nightmarish underside
of modern life-saving technology, to what it means to be human.
Fran Dorf on Saving
Elijah
After I lost my son in 1994,
I was incapacitated with grief. I was convinced Id never be capable
of writing another novel. At some point, however, I decided that I needed
to write another book, because I didnt know what else to do with
myself. But how was I going to find a theme other than grief, when my
grief was so huge? Yet grief it was, and I vowed I would try to be true
to the psychological devastation that serious bereavement produces, as
I felt and observed it in myself, and saw it in others.
Through many early drafts, I struggled to write a conventional novel about
a woman whose marriage had broken up after the loss of a child, telling
her story mostly in flashback. Perhaps contrary to conventional wisdom,
I found that the more I fictionalized, separating my own experience from
my characters, the more cathartic the writing became. Several years
into the process, an acquaintance, after hearing that I had lost a child,
stared for a moment, then muttered, "Anything but that, anything
but that." Many people had that reaction, as if the parent were given
a choice in the matter. But the fact is you do try to bargain with God.
I cant imagine who wouldnt, even a nonbeliever. My life for
my childs.
I turned my plot inside out, and before long the ghost called Seth Lucien
appeared, in all his taunting grandeur, as the vehicle for a Faustian
bargain, in a story that takes the reader, and my character Dinah, into
the very heart of grief and loss and faith.
While on one level Saving Elijah is a supernatural thriller, the ghost
doesnt just walk into the story to scare us. The reader is already
terrified by the situation. The ghost is Dinahs disembodied self,
her wrecked "ego" in psychological terms, playing her life back
to her, blocking her normal coping mechanisms, personifying the grief
and guilt that any parent would feel in such a situation: "Where
did I go wrong? What could I have done differently?"
With his running commentary on the action, the ghostwho shares certain
qualities with the dybbuk (evil spirit) of Jewish folk legend also
functions as a Greek chorus, albeit a lunatic one. Since a ghost doesnt
have to observe human rules of decorum, he can tease, play mind-games,
philosophize, joke, and shock, which seems about right in the surreal
world of a pediatric intensive care unit. I put the ghost into competition
with the horrific events of the story. True life wins for horror, and
Seth is the comic reliefsort of.
I hope that Saving Elijah, while moving readers and compelling them to
turn the pages, makes them think. As Seth might say, "Let the play
begin."
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1. Saving Elijah opens with three quotations that are intimately tied to the themes of the novel. In what ways do they enhance the story being told? Which quotation do you feel has the greatest impact on the reader in relation to Dinahs story, and why?
2.Why does the author juxtapose the ghost with the real-life horrors that Dinah faces in the PICU? How does the ghosts attack on Dinah personify the bereavement process? How does his voice alter the mood of the novel?
3. The idea that every human being has decisions to make in life is a significant theme in all literature, including Saving Elijah. In addition to the Faustian bargain proposed by the ghost, what other decisions is Dinah faced with? How do her experiences or personality influence the choices she ultimately makes?
4. Life support is a complicated question about which there are diverse opinons, as is evident in the novel. How do the background and beliefs (religious, political, ethical, medical) of each of the characters influence their opinions about this question? Are you surprised by any of these opinions? What are your views, and how have they been shaped by your background or beliefs? Does the novel as a whole take a stand on the question of life support, and if so, what is it?
5. What effect is achieved by the authors decision to tell the story from Dinahs point of view? How might the novel differ if it were told by an impartial narrator or in alternating voices?
6. In your opinion, is Dinahs encounter with the ghost a figment of her imagination or an actual religious experience? Can an outside observer differentiate between the two?
7. What impact does Dinahs mother have on her daughters actions? To what extent is Dinahs marriage influenced by her severed relationship with Julie? To what degree does guilt play a role in their separation?
8. Why do you think Dinah reacts so strongly and negatively to Dr. Moore? Did the diverse temperaments and approaches of the physicians in the book surprise you?
9. The psychiatrist Dr. Kessler defines compassion as "willingness to be close to suffering." Why do you think Dinah cant see it this way at that moment, focusing instead on the "babblers, advice-givers and pain-minimizers," as she calls them? In your own experience, as either a recipient or giver of compassion, are people mostly willing to be "close to suffering"?
10. Why does Dinah reject the traditional trappings of her own profession, such as grief support or personal therapy? Do you think that such a character would eventually seek help from these sources?
11.The word "closure" is often used to express the resolution of grief. Do you think Dinah has achieved it or will achieve it? Does "closure" accurately describe the most desirable outcome for anyones grief?
12. What is the function of the various life stories presented in the narrative, particularly those of Dinahs mother and the elderly writers? Why do you think the author chose not to reveal the details of Ellen Shoenfelds Holocaust experience?
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"A moving tale of a mother haunted by the grave illness of her son and by a demon from her past. But it is more: a rich and compelling story of faith, grief, guilt, ghosts, God, and ultimately, hope. "
Susan
Isaacs, author of Shining Through
"Crackles with suspense, dark humor and provocative questions . . . Heart-wrenching . . . A compelling page-turner that turns a family tragedy into a spellbinding novel of psychological suspense, and meditates, with honesty and insight, on the nature of parental love and responsibility. "
Publishers Weekly (starred
review)