Books for Prep









Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - FOP's Warrior Mother

Finding Magic Mountain: Life with Five Glorious Kids and a Rogue Gene Called FOP (Avalon Publishing Group) constitutes nothing less than operating instructions on how to grow emotional calluses and take life on, on its own terms. In her fast-moving memoir about a large lively family pulling together over the musculoskeletal disorder FOP, which appears in her son Vincent's ninth year, Carol Zapata-Whelan tells a story of hope and epiphanies. She won't let the reader into the full impact of FOP until her story is well underway, and then crafts a breathtaking scene around the opening of a manila envelope: "As my husband and I sat in the family room that night, absorbing the words on those Xeroxed pages, it was as if all sound and motion had stopped and that white room with blue couches was a bell jar, or a frozen frame in a film, or even that instant when the electricity goes and you suddenly hear the silence under ordinary life." We are given a roadmap through disbelief, denial, rage, bargaining and an uneasy truce that might be called acceptance: It is Elizabeth Kubler Ross's work that Zapata-Whelan leads us through, keeping her point of view--as mother--straight. As a writer, I appreciate the fluid narrative structure of Zapata-Whelan's book and how she makes a universal statement of coping with suffering out of the particulars of her life: her tardiness, her Latinness, her otherworldliness, her rapport with husband and children, with the Old World grandparents. It is, ultimately, from her son Vincent's grace and steadiness that Zapata-Whelan learns about joy along life's toughest roads.
I loved this book for the warrior path that the author blazes through her example of love, courage, and bravery in the face of overwhelming heartbreak.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Pure Magic
As someone with the disease, FOP, I thought this book
would be something different than what it is- but it is wonderful.
It is everyday life grafted suddenly into a road less traveled by
few, but exclaims a spirit of endurance that is universal. Zapata-
Whelan is real and identifiable in her life as a hurried but
dedicated mom, university professor, and instant advocate for her
son, Vincent. The only other books I can remember reading and not
able to put down until every last word was read were The Bell Jar,
by Sylvia Plath, and a book by Garcia Marquez where there is love
in the midst of a war zone. In the war zone of fop, and the sadness
and joy that follows the events unfolding in their lives, this must-
read is one you won't be able to put down.





Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - A Tale of Courage, Humor, and Love
With self-effacing humor and grace, Carol Zapata-Whelan chronicles her son Vincent's ongoing journey with a rare genetic disease, and the gifts of faith, humility, and acceptance that sustain them along the way. Juggling a family of five children ranging in age from college to kindergarten, Ms. Zapata-Whelan writes about life, parenting, and spirituality, citing both our greatest poets and the playground wisdom of four-year-olds along the way. A testament to a son's courage and a mother's perseverance and love, this book's inspiring message will stay with you for a long time to come.





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