Fridays with Friends--Elaine Cooper
What an amazing story our guest today has for us! Read it and be blessed. Thanks so much for sharing, Elaine.
The Healing Power of Writing
By Elaine Marie Cooper
Sometimes we can look to the past to help heal the present. That healing can take many forms but in my case it was the balm of writing about my ancestors that helped me recover from the loss of my daughter.
Bethany was 24 when she passed away from a brain tumor and I knew my life would never be the same. As a freelance writer for many years, my mind assumed that I would write a book about that experience in order to help others. But in the months after the Lord took her home, I was not that strong. Just the thought of re-living the two years prior to her death by writing it out in excruciating detail was more than I could endure at the time.
On the fourth anniversary of her passing, a sudden revelation of sorts birthed in my thoughts: I would write about my fourth great-grandparents during the American Revolution. I was always intrigued by the family story of the British soldier who stayed behind in America and married an American woman. I couldn’t think of anything more romantic than two enemies coming together, so caught up in each other that politics was tossed to the wind so they could be together.
But an interesting tapestry of healing took place in my heart as I researched and created the words that flowed from one chapter to the next. Although I was writing fiction, the emotional and spiritual turmoil that unfolded in the characters was real. It was the devastation of loss that was transferred from my heart to my characters lives. And as they recovered and healed, so did I.
The book that was birthed from my pain is The Road to Deer Run. Set in 1777, it involves the unexpected meeting of a wounded British soldier and a colonial farm woman. Both have experienced loss. Both are filled with anger. But besides falling in love with each other, they also learn to have faith and trust in God and to forgive.
This first novel led to my sequel The Promise of Deer Run, which releases in a couple of weeks (by Sept. 1, 2011). The series has now turned into a saga and I am beginning the research for Book Three.
Summary of The Road to Deer Run:
During the American Revolution, British soldier Daniel Lowe has been captured after being wounded at the Battle of Saratoga in 1777. He escapes from his captors and hides in the woods to die, only to be rescued by Mary Thomsen, an American farmwoman. As Daniel’s festering wound heals, his gratitude to the woman who saved him transforms into love. But as an enemy soldier, his presence is endangering Mary, as well as her widowed mother and little sister. As he desperately tries to hide his identity, he is faced with numerous obstacles: exposure by the local Patriots, an attack by a British deserter, and a threat from his worst nemesis, an American soldier who also loves Mary and figures out who Daniel really is.
“With subplots as appealing as the main story, the book is well researched, well written, and well worth the purchase price. Ready for the sequel.”
— Kirkus Discoveries Reviews
Honorable Mention in the 2011 Los Angeles Book Festival Awards
Finalist in the 2011 Next Generation Indie Book Awards
Summary of The Promise of Deer Run:
America’s war for freedom from England has been over for seven years, but the wounds of that conflict still haunt the minds and hearts of the residents of Deer Run. Young American veteran Nathaniel Stearns has withdrawn to a life of isolation as he awaits his father who never returned from the war. A near-tragedy in the woods brings him face-to-face with nineteen-year-old Sarah Thomsen, someone he had long admired but he assumed had eyes for another. This chance encounter opens a crack into the door of his heart as mutual affection quickly blooms. But slander and lies soon mar the budding romance, rendering both Sarah and Nathaniel wounded and untrusting as their faith in both their God and each other is shattered. Set in 1790, this book continues the story of the Thomsen and Lowe families as they struggle to survive in the aftermath of the war that birthed the United States.
Author Biography
Elaine Marie Cooper grew up in Massachusetts but now lives in the Midwest with her husband, her three dogs and one huge cat. She has two married sons and triplet grandchildren who are now one-year-old. Elaine’s only daughter Bethany passed away in 2003 from a brain tumor.
A retired registered nurse, Elaine has been a magazine freelance writer for many years, and is a regular contributor to a blog on the Midwest called The Barn Door (www.thebarndoor.net) and a blog on Christian living called Reflections In Hindsight (ReflectionsInHindsight.wordpress.com) She is also the author of her debut novel called “The Road to Deer Run.” The sequel, “The Promise of Deer Run,” will be available by Fall of 2011.
Elaine Cooper can be reached on FaceBook http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000997223171
or visit her website at:
DeerRunBooks.com
6 comments:
Elaine,
Thanks for sharing your story with us. We all have hurts in our lives and sometimes it is hard to open up and share those. I am glad that God found a way to help you heal from your broken heart and share with others at the same time.
Rose, thanks for having Elaine share on your site. Also, I really like the town you have at the top of your blog. It reminds me of one I built on one of the fb games.
May God bless you both, Deborah.
How touching. I didn't know that Elaine had lost her daughter. I read the first few chapters of 'The Road to Deer Run' as part of a freebie giveaway and really liked it. It's still on my list to buy and read. One of these days ...
Very nice feature, Rose.
Thanks so much for stopping by, Deborah and Tracy. YOur comments encouraged me, and I'm sure they did Elaine, also.
Thanks for stopping by, Deborah and Tracy. And Rose, you are so sweet— will never forget your patience with me! Blessings to you all!
Thanks so much for sharing. You've been through a lot, but the Lord has stood by you and helped you with your pain. Your books sound good. I'll keep them in mind for future reads.
I hope it's not too late to comment. Your interview touched me. My parents are into genealogy and I'm impressed with the amount of research you must have done for this series.
I'm also sorry for your loss. In one month at our church my husband and another man and a teenage boy were all diagnosed with brain tumors. We all did a lot of praying during that season of our lives. Each was a different kind. We flew out to California, the other man went to Duke and the boy went down to FL. Each of these places specialized in their specific brain tumor. While I won't pretend to know what you went through, I do understand a little of the fears you faced.
Again, I'm truly sorry for your loss.
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