Falling In The Deep
by Patricia Anne Phillips
by Patricia Anne Phillips
Falling In The Deep is a novel that gives the true meaning of rivalry, betrayal and deception, and no meaning at all for marriage vows, such as . . . through sickness and health.
Falling In The Deep Interview with Ella Curry and Patricia Anne Phillips
http://www.audioacrobat.com/note/C8HJTZ94
Listen to a reading from Falling In The Deep by Patricia Anne Phillips
http://www.audioacrobat.com/note/C2NgBt94
Falling In The Deep is a gripping, hurtful story of Sabrina Chapman who is diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis (MS). Readers will feel her pain and wonder about the true meaning of their own marriage vows. Also, it will give readers awareness of MS and the symptoms.
The story takes place in Mill Valley, a middle class neighborhood near the San Francisco Golden Gate Bridge. Sabrina Chapman had the perfect life, a loving husband and two adoring children. She was happy, living the life she always wanted and deeply in love with her husband, or so she thought until she was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis (MS), and the essence of life she once taken for granted no longer existed.
Jason Chapman is disappointed with the news of his wife health; it was no longer the life they had planned. Why should he stay in a marriage that he didn’t ask for? After all he wasn’t the one with MS? He wanted to make career moves, and have a healthy, beautiful wife by his side.
In Falling In The Deep, readers will cry, laugh and follow one woman’s life of bravery, as she forges ahead to make a life for her and her two children, and with the help of someone that see’s her as the beautiful, smart woman she always was. Falling In The Deep can be purchased on Amazon for books and Kindle, also in various stores.
What is Multiple Sclerosis or MS?
Multiple Sclerosis or MS is a disease that affects the brain and spinal cord, resulting in loss of muscle control, vision, balance, and sensation (such as numbness). With MS, the nerves of the brain and spinal cord are damaged by one's own immune system.
According to the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, the condition affects approximately 400,000 Americans and is, with the exception of trauma, the most frequent cause of neurological disability beginning in early to middle adulthood. Multiple Sclerosis is two to three times as common in females as in males and its occurrence is unusual before adolescence. A person has an increased risk of developing the disease from the teen years to age 50, with the risk gradually declining thereafter. For more information on MS, go here: http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/multiple-sclerosis/DS00188
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