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Called for Life

How Loving Our Neighbor Led Us into the Heart of the Ebola Epidemic

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Dr. Kent and Amber Brantly (with David Thomas) tell of Dr. Brantly's near-death encounter with the Ebola virus in Liberia. The first American diagnosed during the 2014 outbreak, Dr. Brantly's ordeal-including his controversial evacuation to and hospitalization in the United States-received worldwide media attention. Interspersed in the account is the full story of how both Kent and his wife, Amber, sought to serve others in the name of Christ in Liberia. Then, when tragedy struck-as thousands, perhaps millions of people worldwide prayed for his life-miraculous events unfolded that resulted in Dr. Brantly's flight to Emory University Hospital in Atlanta...and an eventual clean bill of health.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Kaleo Griffith and Sara Zimmerman come together to narrate the harrowing story of an American missionary doctor and his wife and their work in the 2013 Ebola epidemic in Liberia. Griffith retells Kent's story with the angst and concern of a husband, father, and doctor who has contracted the very disease he is treating while never losing hope in God. Zimmerman portrays Amber, the wife and mother who is unsure what the future holds while her husband lies dying in a living room some 6,000 miles away while the international news continues its daily churn. Amber's perspective provides a completeness to the audio experience. Listeners will enjoy this firsthand account of the recent global health scare. T.D. © AudioFile 2017, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 8, 2015
      Kent Brantly, the first American to contract and survive Ebola, tells his story in riveting detail; his wife, Amber, provides a kind of support harmony, relating her role as anguished spouse half a world away from her critically ill husband. The Brantlys were medical missionaries in Liberia—he a doctor and she a nurse—when Ebola erupted in West Africa in early 2014. Kent contracted the disease from a patient. The Brantlys’ narrative provides a little personal history to help readers know them and understand their motivations (which are related to their faith) for working in Liberia, but the bulk of their story focuses on the epidemic and Kent’s own illness, told in unvarnished detail with pacing that approaches a medical thriller. His survival raises medical, ethical, and theological questions; the mortality rate for infected Africans is far higher than for American medical personnel working with them. Brantly himself reflects on the meaning of his survival. Only one of his patients, a young boy, did not succumb to the disease. It’s a page-turner that should also get readers thinking about God and the meaning of compassion.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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