cover image Tour de Life: From Coma to Competition

Tour de Life: From Coma to Competition

Saul Raisin, Dave Shields. Three Story Press, $29.95 (279pp) ISBN 978-0-9748492-2-5

In 2006, 23-year-old Raisin was on his way to an impressive cycling career when a bad crash sent him into a coma, necessitating emergency brain surgery. Doctors told Raisin's frantic parents he probably wouldn't make it, and that if he did, he'd be confined to bed, ""or at best a wheelchair for the rest of his life."" What follows is Raisin's long, miraculous, tear-jerking fight back to the cycling arena. Hospitalized in France for 28 days, Raisin finally returns to America and his Georgia home to begin his recovery; one of the peculiarities of his brain injury is that even while actively recovering, his brain would not process the extent of his injuries: ""My wonderful life has somehow become scrambled beyond repair."" In an especially moving passage, Raisin discovers for the first time exactly what happened to him and the severity of his injuries by Googling his name. Determined to win back what he lost, Raisin sets his own stakes: ""They said I could never walk, so I say I will run. They said I could never ride a bike, so I say I'll compete in another race."" Stilted dialog, especially in the first half, tends to distract, as do occasional, unnecessary tangents (e.g., doping, Lance Armstrong), but not enough to keep this memorable story of personal and family crisis from engaging and inspiring.