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Elaine Marie Cooper Author

Historical Fiction That Grabs Your Heart and Feeds Your Soul

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Pre-Orders for “Bethany’s Calendar”

November 13, 2014 by emcoop Leave a Comment

Bethany’s Calendar is available for pre-order!

My first non-fiction is the memoir of my daughter’s battle with a brain tumor. She was only 23-years-old when our lives started to crumble with her diagnosis. But her journey through her final days were a testimony to God’s faithfulness and care at a time when our family needed it the most. I pray that Bethany’s story will help caregivers of the ill, cancer victims (patients and their families) and friends of the ill who don’t know how to help, but have a desire to do so.

When you pre-order through CrossRiver Media, you will get the book by its release on December 12. (Please do not pre-order through other online sites as it will take longer for you to receive it.)

I’ll write much more about Bethany’s Calendar in the coming days, but I wanted those who have been asking, to have an opportunity to get their orders in.

And thank you to all of my readers for your interest. You are all a blessing to me.

Bethanys Calendar Cover

To order, click here.

Celebrating — One Hundred Reviews!

November 1, 2014 by emcoop 4 Comments

Perhaps other more well-known authors are used to it. But this not-on-the-New-York-Times-Bestseller-List author is grateful beyond words. My one hundredth review of Fields of the Fatherless posted this week on Amazon. Even better, the reviews tally up to 4.8 out of 5 stars.

God is so gracious and has blessed Fields of the Fatherless beyond anything I might have hoped for. He is the one I give credit to for this milestone and for the awards this book has won.

I want to thank each of you who have read this young adult fiction and responded to the story. Your positive reflections about Fields of the Fatherless have touched me deeply. Some readers offered criticism and I am grateful for that as well. Authors who shut their ears to the voices of critics are not allowing themselves to grow in their craft. May I never be so caught up in “my own way” that I will not listen to input from others.

Thank you, thank you, readers and reviewers! I cherish you and am honored to write books that both entertain and teach something about the history of this great nation. And if you are inspired to grow stronger in your faith through the words that I write, I am truly blessed beyond measure.

Bethany’s Calendar

October 20, 2014 by emcoop 4 Comments

Our lives changed forever eleven years ago today when my daughter’s “calendar” on earth ended. But her life in heaven had just began.

She was only 24 and my family never imagined that our bright, funny and faith-filled daughter would have such a short stay with us. But sometimes cancer interferes with our hopes and dreams. And sometimes, God has other plans.

My family has  been through so much in the ensuing years, yet we continue to be amazed at the life she shared with us, as well as the impact she had on so many others. We will always treasure her in our hearts, and look forward to seeing her again in eternity.

The most amazing thing about this eleventh year has been writing Bethany’s Calendar, the story of her final days on earth as she suffered from brain cancer. The fact that I had the strength to write it at all attests to the power of intercessory prayer as others raised me up in this difficult writing task. Although it was emotionally exhausting, the words and the story flowed.

Now Bethany’s Calendar is on the verge of being released in a few weeks. I am amazed at the smooth transition from writing first draft to now anticipating holding the final copy of the book. I can’t wait to share it with others and PRAY that it helps patients and their families who are in similar circumstances.

Bethanys Calendar Cover

I’ll be honest. Going through final edits this past weekend brought more than one tear. There is no loss like saying goodbye to your child.

Yet I am not bitter, nor do I repeat the often spoken phrase, “No parent should have to bury their child.” While that may be the human perspective, God’s perspective about life is that He is God, and He decides when our work on this earth is complete. Sometimes that is as soon as a child is birthed or it may be in old age. But “The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away; may the name of the Lord be praised.” Job 1:21 NIV

Here are some of the words from “God is God” by Steven Curtis Chapman. This song played on my car radio—seemingly every time I went driving during Bethany’s illness. The verses are a reminder to me that God is the creator, with his purposes for His creation:

 

God is God and I am not

I can only see a part of the picture He’s painting

God is God and I am man

So I’ll never understand it all

For only God is God.

 

Launch for Bethany’s Calendar is December 12, 2014. It would have been her 36th birthday.

 

 

 

 

Cancer Support – Is it Breast-Obsessed?

October 11, 2014 by emcoop 8 Comments

October is Breast Cancer Awareness month. I did my part by getting a colonoscopy.

Whaaat? That’s for colon cancer, right?

Right. And that is my point. There are other types of cancers that are more deadly than breast cancer. Yet the American Cancer Society (ACS) deems breast cancer as the body part most worthy of an entire month. In fact, it is the only type of cancer that gets 31 days for promotion and fundraising, specifically sponsored by the ACS. See their link here.

I became acutely aware of this apparent bias a couple of years ago when shuttling a friend to her radiation treatment appointment. Although my friend’s lung cancer appeared to be in remission, a tumor had been discovered in her brain. She was unable to drive herself to the appointment so I took her in my car and assisted her into the waiting area.

I had been through this scenario before with family, so I was prepared for the usual routine of waiting in semi-comfortable chairs. What I wasn’t prepared for was the décor: Numerous displays of headless mannequins wearing brightly decorated bras that were used as fundraising items to support the fight against breast cancer. On one table I noticed a painted, plaster-of-Paris type piece of art: Another colorful bra that, I suppose was meant to encourage those with breast cancer.

October—The month of Pink
October—The month of Pink

But my friend wasn’t there for breast cancer.

I kept my emotions in check as I approached the woman at the check-in counter. My friend with the brain tumor had already been led away to the radiation chamber and I used this opportunity to ask a few questions of the receptionist. Mainly, I wanted to know if ALL kinds of cancer were treated at this large cancer center.

“Oh, yes,” she said in a friendly yet professional manner. I then asked about the “bra” décor that covered every nook and cranny. Yes, these were for the breast cancer fundraiser. She looked quite pleased.

“But,” I calmly but earnestly asked her, “does this not make it seem like the ONLY cancer you treat here is breast cancer? Would this perhaps make others—victims of prostate, colon, brain cancer—feel like theirs was not as important?”

Pointing to a small plastic holder with 8 x 11 size papers in it, she assured me that there were groups that met to support each kind of cancer group. She seemed satisfied…but I was not.

“But my friend is here for brain cancer.” She basically brushed off my concerns.

And no wonder. Because in the last ten years, aside from an annual card in the mail to say the American Cancer Society was doing a fundraiser, the only obvious efforts to raise money to fight malignancies that I have seen are for cancer of the breast.

Most of us can name at least one (probably more) organizations that specifically gears its efforts to raise money for and, awareness of, breast cancer.  There are Facebook groups, community businesses efforts, and athletic events all geared towards fighting this particular form of malignancy.

As a woman, I am grateful that so many are concerned about that particular part of my anatomy. As a daughter who has lost her father to colon cancer, as a niece who has lost a beloved uncle to lung cancer, and—most painful of all—as a mother who has lost a daughter to brain cancer, I am frankly sick of this focus on the mammary glands.

This nation is breast-obsessed.

Let me share a few statistics, courtesy of the National Cancer Institute. They have estimates for the numbers of cases of each type of cancer expected to have occurred in 2014, along with the numbers of deaths that are expected. I have also listed the survival rate after 5 years:

                                 Diagnosed cases         Deaths expected          5-Year Survival

Breast                         232,670                      40,000                           89.2%

Colon and Rectal            136,830                    50,310                  64.7%

Lungs and Bronchi        224,210                 159,260                  16.8%

 

If you noticed the alarmingly high numbers of cases and subsequent deaths from lung cancer, don’t assume it’s because all the victims smoked. Although most cases of this disease are due to smoking, it is often second-hand smoke that leads to lung cancer. Asbestos as well. There is a test for finding early stage lung cancer, called a low-dose spiral CT scan. I’m sure it’s expensive. But then again, so are mammograms.

Colon cancer has more fatalities percentage wise compared to breast cancer yet it is one of the most preventable cancers when colonoscopies are utilized. These are quite expensive. So are mammograms.

Do I think that funds raised for research and support for breast cancer are a bad thing? Heavens, no. My mom had breast cancer (and survived it) and I’ve had friends with the same. I am grateful for the screenings and the drugs.

But in this month of October—the same month during which I saw my daughter die of brain cancer eleven years ago, and my father die of colon cancer 25 years ago—I say, let’s support ALL cancer research.

Cancer is an equal-opportunity attacker. It doesn’t care where in the body the alien cells begin to grow and take over—so why should we?

I guess some cancers are just not sexy enough to promote. But in truth, there is NOTHING sexy about cancer.

 

 

 

Winners of “The Promise of Deer Run”

July 15, 2014 by emcoop Leave a Comment

On June 27, I posted about PTSD Awareness Day and offered three copies of The Promise of Deer Run to three commenters.

I am delighted to announce the three winners of my post Revolutionary War novel that deals with Post Traumatic Stress in veterans. They are:

 

Heidi Morrell

Debra Butterfield

Janet Grunst

Promise of Deer Run, The
Book 2 in the Deer Run Saga

Congrats to each of you! A signed copy is on the way!

If you missed the article about PTSD Awareness Day, I am reposting it. Click here.

Why the American Revolution is NOT the Civil War

July 6, 2014 by emcoop Leave a Comment

A recent review that I read for my latest novel, Fields of the Fatherless, made me groan.

Now please don’t get me wrong: I VERY MUCH appreciate folks who take the time to read and/or listen and then review my books.  Reviewers could spend their precious moments on any given day doing anything else in their busy lives. Instead, they have chosen to post their thoughts about a book that I wrote. I am so grateful to my reviewers.

What made me groan was yet another reminder of how often Americans confuse two crucial wars that occurred in our country: The American Revolution and the Civil War (also called the War Between the States). Each war significantly changed our country. Each conflict set our states on a new course. And each war should be duly remembered for its importance in our nation’s history.

Although my book is clearly labeled a Revolutionary War novel, the above-mentioned reviewer called it a book about the Civil War. The person even changed the clearly designated British soldier as a “Confederate” soldier. *SIGH*

Ok. Time for a brief history lesson:

DSCN5092

The American Revolution was the war that changed Colonial America into the United States of America. It was fought between the American colonists against Great Britain, the mother nation.

It began in 1775 and lasted eight years. The signing of the Declaration of Independence, for which we celebrate the 4th of July and the birth of our nation, occurred in 1776. So this year celebrates our 238th Birthday. Happy Birthday, America!

George Washington became the 1st president of the United States, starting after the first election in 1789.

 

The Civil War started on April 12, 1861 and was fought between the Northern states and the Southern states of this country. It ended when General Robert E. Lee surrendered the last Confederate (Southern) Army to General Ulysses S. Grant on April 9, 1865 (although the last battle was actually fought in Texas on May 13, 1865).

The core conflict was the issue of slavery and states rights.

The war took place during the presidency of Abraham Lincoln, the nation’s 16th president.

 

*     *     *     *     *

As you can see from this extremely brief history lesson, the wars occurred in completely different centuries and had conflicts born of varying concerns.

As a writer of historical fiction set in the American Revolution, I hope that my work brings to light the issues that led to the birth of the United States.

 

Winner, YA Fiction, 2014 Selah Award; Best Religious Fiction, 2014 Next Generation Indie Book Awards
Winner, YA Fiction, 2014 Selah Award; Best Religious Fiction, 2014 Next Generation Indie Book Awards

And on this 4th of July weekend, please take a moment to thank God for the sacrifices that our forefathers and foremothers made in establishing this nation in 1776 when the Declaration of Independence was signed. It was an astonishing announcement—the concept of a free and independent country ruled by the people, of the people and for the people.

 

May that freedom continue to ring.

 

Huzzah!

 

You can purchase Fields of the Fatherless here.

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