The Match
Complete Strangers, a Miracle Face Transplant, Two Lives Transformed
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- $13.99
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
Joseph Helfgot, the son of Holocaust survivors, worked his way from a Lower East Side tenement to create a successful Hollywood research company. But his heart was failing. After months of waiting for a heart transplant, he died during the operation.
Hours after his death, his wife Susan was asked a shocking question: would she donate her husband’s face to a total stranger?
The stranger was James Maki, the adopted son of parents who spent part of World War II in an internment camp for Japanese Americans. Rebelling against his stern father, a professor, by enlisting to serve in Vietnam, he returned home a broken man, addicted to drugs. One night he fell facedown onto the electrified third rail of a Boston subway track.
A young Czech surgeon who was determined to make a better life on the other side of the Iron Curtain was on call when the ambulance brought Maki to the hospital. Although Dr. Bohdan Pomahac gave him little chance of survival, Maki battled back. He was sober and grateful for a second chance, but he became a recluse, a man without a face. His only hope was a controversial face transplant, and Dr. Pomahac made it happen.
In The Match, Susan Whitman Helfgot captures decades of drama and history, taking us from Warsaw to Japan, from New York to Hollywood. Through wars and immigration, poverty and persecution, from a medieval cadaver dissection to a stunning seventeen-hour face transplant, she weaves together the story of people forever intertwined—a triumphant legacy of hope.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
When Helfgot's husband, Joseph, the son of Holocaust survivors, died from complications after a heart transplant, she chose to donate his face to James Maki, a mixed Blackfoot Indian and Japanese orphan. Maki was also a Vietnam veteran who had struggled with drug addiction after the war and had lost his face after falling onto subway tracks. He'd undergone a number of operations and was living in a halfway house on Boston's North Shore. With the help of veteran collaborator Novak, who aided in the autobiographies of Nancy Reagan and Magic Johnson, Helfgot shares her journey to this history-making operation and its aftermath, along the way relaying the dramatic differences between these two men whose lives would be intertwined forever. Written in the third person and clogged with medical jargon, the story can feel impersonal at times, but it's still more compelling than most fiction, and demonstrates how compassionate doctors and technology can combine to make medical miracles.