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"I'm Sorry, It's Pancreatic Cancer": Dava's Battle
"I'm Sorry, It's Pancreatic Cancer": Dava's Battle

"I'm Sorry, It's Pancreatic Cancer": Dava's Battle with Pancreatic Cancer Using Her Journals as My Footstool

Product ID : 49359948


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About "I'm Sorry, It's Pancreatic Cancer": Dava's Battle

" I'm Sorry, It's Pancreatic Cancer" Is complete at 60,000 words.  My memoir follows the fourteen month journey I took with Dava my wife of 40 years, and our four daughters from the moment we heard the diagnosis through how we coped with losing her.                                                                My words in telling our story are interspersed with my wife's journal entries as well as a few added journal entries from my daughter's journal and mine. Combined, these journal entries give powerful meaning and reaction to the events as they were happening in the moment.                                                                                                         This memoir would appeal to anyone confronting this particular cancer of which there are 57,000 plus cases diagnosed each year.. Any person with a serious illness, as well as those close to the person afflicted, will find a kindred spirit in our story.                                          The main theme that reverberates throughout is the tragedy of knowing the final outcome without spoiling the beauty of our story that still had yet to unfold as we continued the remaining days of our lives together.  In addition, there are photographs of specific references in the text to make the story personal for all.                                          This one time journey had no rehearsals.  I was beside Dava nearly every step of our fourteen months watching and helping anyway I could as she courageously found the will each day to survive for those whom she loved most.  Above all, love abounds all around and comes through vividly inour tragic and beautiful story.                                       Sometimes Dava reveals she felt as a "dot on a wall" even around loved ones.  This lonliness of an individual with a terminal illness comes across in dramatic fashion.  Much as John Keats, whom I quote in the book, he stated, "A person in health as you are can have no conception of the horro