Great Book: Ghost Boy

Title: Ghost Boy
 
Authors:  Martin Pistorius and Megan Lloyd-Davies 
  • Hardcover:304 pages
  • Publisher:Simon & Schuster Ltd (7 July 2011)
  • ISBN-10:0857203312
  • ISBN-13:978-0857203311
  • Product Dimensions: 21.8 x 14 x 3.4 cm

Product Description

In January 1988, aged twelve, Martin Pistorius fell inexplicably sick. First he lost his voice and stopped eating; then he slept constantly and shunned human contact. Doctors were mystified. Within eighteen months he was mute and wheelchair-bound. Martin’s parents were told that an unknown degenerative disease had left him with the mind of a baby and he probably had less than two years to live. Martin went on to be cared for at centres for severely disabled children, a shell of the bright, vivacious boy he had once been. What no-one knew is that while Martin’s body remained unresponsive his mind slowly woke up, yet he could tell no-one; he was a prisoner inside a broken body. Then, in 1998, when Martin was twenty-three years old, an aromatherapy masseuse began treating him and sensed some part of him was alert. Experts were dismissive, but his parents persevered and soon realised their son was as intelligent as he’d always been. With no memory of the time before his illness, Martin was a man-child reborn in a world he didn’t know. He was still in a wheelchair and unable to speak, but he was brilliantly adept at computer technology. Since then, and against all odds, he has fallen in love, married and set up a design business which he runs from his home in Essex. Ghost Boy is an incredible, deeply moving story of recovery and the power of love. Through Martin’s story we can know what it is like to be here and yet not here – unable to communicate yet feeling and understanding everything. Martin’s emergence from his darkness enables us to celebrate the human spirit and is a wake-up call to cherish our own lives.

 

About the Author

Martin Pistorius was born in Johannesburg, South Africa in 1975. An unknown illness at the age of twelve left him wheelchair bound and unable to speak, and he spent fourteen years in institutions. In 2001 he learned to communicate via computer, make friends and change his life. In 2008 he met the love of his life, Joanna, and immigrated to the UK. In 2009 they married and in 2010 he started his own business. He describes himself a Geek with a wicked sense of humour and a love of technology. He loves animals, is a keen photographer, enjoys watching cricket, Formula 1 Grand Prix and films, listening to music, spending time with friends and, most of all, being with his wife.

Book Recommendation: The Decision Book

 
Authors:  Roman Tschäppeler and Mikael Krogerus 
  • Hardcover:176 pages
  • Publisher:Profile Books (6 Jan 2011)
  • LanguageEnglish
  • ISBN-10:1846683955
  • ISBN-13:978-1846683954
  • Product Dimensions: 17.2 x 11.8 x 1.6 cm

Product Description

Most of us face the same questions every day: What do I want? And how can I get it? How can I live more happily and work more efficiently? A European bestseller, The Decision Book distils into a single volume the fifty best decision-making models used on MBA courses and elsewhere that will help you tackle these important questions – from the well known (the Eisenhower matrix for time management) to the less familiar but equally useful (the Swiss Cheese model). It will even show you how to remember everything you will have learned by the end of it. Stylish and compact, this little black book is a powerful asset. Whether you need to plot a presentation, assess someone’s business idea or get to know yourself better, this unique guide will help you simplify any problem and take steps towards the right decision.
 

About the Author

Roman Tschäppeler is the founder and CEO of guzo, a communication agency based in Biel, Switzerland. Mikael Krogerus is a freelance writer for German and Swiss newspapers and magazines and was a staff writer with Switzerland’s leading newspaper Neue Zürcher Zeitung for five years. They have a brilliant blog at http://50topmodels.wordpress.com/