Review
"'Cancer Happens' is Gifford's nitty-gritty Cancer Confidential....Readers are even privy to what's hiding up her sleeve." --
Brandon Berry, Cincinnati City Beat"...chronicles...life from her initial diagnosis to her attempts to return to normal life after being treated for cancer." --
Swathi Sridharan, Dayton Daily News, July 28, 2003"...it will provide comfort to those having to share her experience." --
Bookview.com"...poignant yet humorous...'Cancer Happens' represents a rarity among cancer books...it addresses issues related to young adults." --
Elizabeth Weinstein, Columbus Dispatch"The author, who was diagnosed with non-Hodgkins lymphoma just out of college, relates her experiences." --
Cleveland Plain Dealer, July 20, 2003"Thoughtful, witty, always truthful, Gifford reminds cancer sufferers that their lives matter even when they're engulfed in misery." --
Nick Owchar, Los Angeles Times, September 7, 2003
Product Description
Informative, honest, at times hilarious, but most of all deeply human, the story of a young woman who survives cancer and lives to tell about it in her own unadulterated words.
Most cancer books deal with patients who are children or seniors, or mature women with breast cancer. Rebecca Gifford was stricken as a young adult, fresh out of college and eager to begin an exciting new job. Initially she asked her doctor about the back spasms she had been having. Two months later, she was diagnosed with non-Hodgkins lymphoma. During the next two years, Rebecca endured chemotherapy, a bone marrow transplant, the loss of her independence, and the collapse of her budding career. In this honest and probing memoir, Rebecca tells it like it wasfrom hair loss to confinement, therapy groups, lack of sex, funerals, morphine, premature menopause, professional humiliation, and much, much more. She explores the wide range of emotions many cancer patients deny like anger, defiance, and vanity and openly shares the ordeal of living through cancer. In this illuminating look at the uncensored thoughts and feelings of an average person fighting an extraordinary struggle, Rebecca tells the reader in no uncertain terms what cancer did to her and for her.
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