A Star's Endless Shine Leaves No Darkness Untouched
Child Prodigy Shirley Cheng's gripping autobiography tells of true, unfortunate and upsetting incidents and pitfalls in American medical and school systems, such as false reports from doctors and psychologists, parental rights, disability issues, society issues, human rights, and education. It also includes the 1990 international news of mother's victory over injustice in her custody case with doctor. http://www.shirleycheng.com
(PRWEB) January 27, 2005 -- The Revelation of a Star's Endless Shine: A Young
Woman's Autobiography of a 20-Year Tale of Trials & Tribulations, just
released by author and poet Shirley Cheng, unveils the gripping, never before
told life story of child prodigy Shirley Cheng--the blind and physically
disabled victim and survivor of severe juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA) and
more so of falsehood in American medical system--and her quest to triumph over
tremendous adversities.
In The Revelation of a Stars Endless Shine,
replete with 50 photographs, Shirley reveals her life story in a world of
terrors, struggles, dreams, and triumphs. From her painful diagnosis of JRA as
an infant, and the 1990 international news of her mother Juliet Cheng's victory
over injustice in her custody case, to their acceptance of a harsh and
devastating fate, Shirley's autobiography will inspire and reveal life's true
values. Relive the past in Shirley's own words in this remarkable young woman's
journey from childhood to a blossoming young woman that spans twenty years.
Experience the hardships endured, the obstacles overcome, and the exquisite
happiness won as she reveals her endless shine.
Shirley Cheng was born in
New York in 1983 to a single-parent, Chinese-speaking family, and receive no
schooling until she was eleven years old because of years of hospitalization.
Having achieved grade level in all areas after about 180 days in a special
education class in elementary school, she was transferred to a regular sixth
grade class in middle school. Shirley quickly developed a voracious appetite for
reading, at times reading as many as three books a day, and a passion for
writing prose and poetry. One of her stories, Mary Miller, the Elusive Lady, was
published by Poughkeepsie Journal in 1997, and her poem, The Colors of the
Rainbow, was published in the anthology Celebrate! New York's Young Poets Speak
Out in 1999. She lost her eyesight at the age of seventeen and received her high
school equivalency diploma at 19. She did the entire GED exam, including
mathematical calculations, graphs, and an essay, completely in her head and
received a special recognition award for achieving a very high score. She hopes
to earn science doctorates from Harvard University after a successful eye
surgery.
Shirley wrote this autobiography when she was twenty years old
using a screen reader, Jaws, on the computer. She is also the author of Daring
Quests of Mystics (ISBN 1-58939-513-1 for softcover and 1-58939-515-8 for
hardcover), published at age twenty, and Dance with Your Heart: Tales and Poems
That the Heart Tells (ISBN: 1-4116-1858-0), an anthology of short stories and
poems she had written between the ages of twelve and twenty-one.
To
receive updates on Shirley's books, subscribe to her announcement newsletter by
sending a blank e-mail to:
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To learn
more about the book and the author, and to read excerpts, go to http://www.shirleycheng.com
ISBN:
1-4116-1860-2
Available from http://www.lulu.com/shirleycheng, and coming soon to
Amazon.com, BN.com, and many other online bookstores and through Ingram. To
order autographed copies, please contact Shirley Cheng at e-mail protected from
spam bots.
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Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/1/prweb200029.htm