"The award-winning children’s book author confronts a new world when faced with his daughter’s illness in this frank, moving, and beautiful memoir. Elisha Cooper spends his mornings writing and
illustrating children’s books, his afternoons playing with his two daughters. The phrase he hates most is "throw like a girl," so he teaches them to climb trees and play ball. But when he
discovers a lump in five-year-old Zoe’s midsection as she sits on his lap at a Chicago Cubs game, everything changes. Surgery,sleepless nights, treatments, a drumbeat of worry. Even as the
family moves to New York and Zoe starts kindergarten, they must navigate a new normal: school and soccer games and hot chocolates in cafes regularly interrupted by anxious visits to the
hospital. And Elisha is forced to balance his desires to be a protective parent even as he encourages his girls to take risks, against the increasing helplessness he feels for his child’s
well-being, and his own. With the observant eye of an artist and remarkable humor, Elisha writes about what it took for him and his wife to preserve a sense of normalcy and joy in their
daughters’ lives; how the family emerged from this experience profoundly changed, but healed and whole; how we are all transformed by the fear and hope we feel for those we love"--