Showing posts with label barnes and noble. Show all posts
Showing posts with label barnes and noble. Show all posts

Monday, January 5, 2009

First Announcement of 2009!

Hello All,
Below is a posting from the Senior Living Guide magazine regarding my book! Be sure to check out the url at the end of the story. I hope you enjoy!
An Inspiring Story of Strength and Survival
LIVING TO TELL ABOUT IT, A
PURSUIT OF NORMALCY


Author Amy Martin shares a life story filled with health challenges

Amy Martin is a writer, business owner, wife, and mother who brings her amazing life story to her first book Living to Tell About It, A Pursuit
of Normalcy
. She experienced multiple health problems all while still a young woman. Through the amazing support of her family and her positive attitude, Amy met each challenge and won. Along with her husband, Amy now owns Visiting Angels. This service provides in-home assistance in a wide range of areas to the sick and elderly. After her own struggles, Amy now uses her skills and experience to help others in need.

In Living to Tell About It, Amy Martin provides a chronological history of her life to this point. Each chapter brings another hospital visit, upsetting diagnosis, or painful effort at rehabilitation. However, instead of focusing
on the medical details or allowing herself an understandable moment of
pity, Amy focuses on the relationships in her life that mattered so much in her pursuit of normalcy. Her story of courage and faith will inspire anyone who is facing some of life’s hurdles. Amy Martin is an example of the hope
and happiness that can be achieved after overcoming incredible odds.

AUTHOR CONTACT INFORMATION
Amy Martin
(919) 524-7047
Amy's book may be purchased online at Barnes & Noble,
Amazon or www.lulu.com/context/2193894
Visit her storefront a
http://stores.lulu.com/AmyMartin

STORY ANGLES
Overcoming Multiple Health Crises: Amy faced a stroke, cancer, Graves disease, multiple
surgeries and a severe car accident that required extensive physical rehabilitation all before reaching the age of forty. Her normalcy was shattered at age nineteen, when most teenagers are enjoying their first tastes of freedom. Her determination to conquer each challenge will
inspire anyone facing a difficult moment in their own lives.

Family and Faith: Each of Amy’s life-changing health issues would provide enough content for a book. However, she keeps her focus on her parents,
husband and other loved ones. The emotional language she uses to describe her family demonstrates bonds that will be understood by all readers. The acknowledgement of the role of faith in her healing process is
an important component of this book in which others can take strength.
Giving Back to Others:
Amy recognizes that the support provided to her by family and friends during each health crisis was essential to her recovery. She has devoted her professional life to directing Visiting Angels, a licensed home-care service that provides assistance to those in need. Amy has earned industry awards and the satisfaction of many clients.

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Feature Article on Amy Y. Martin

Published Sunday, May 25, 2008
Amy Yost Martin chronicles her battles to survive: Never give up
By Lindsay LancasterTimes-Staff News Writer

You never would have guessed that Amy Yost (now Martin), an athletic, popular 1987 Hendersonville High graduate and homecoming queen, would have to fight to survive health problems just as she started college at North Carolina State University in Raleigh.
Now a 38-year-old mother of two, Martin has written a book about her challenging experiences called "Living to Tell About it: A Pursuit of Normalcy." In chronological order, the book starts out with her first challenge: She suffered a stroke at age 19 as she was getting out of a pool. A short time later, she faced an auto accident, which left her fighting to live. Doctors induced a coma. Martin wasn't brought back to consciousness until about a month later.

Next challenge: She spent seven months at Thoms Rehabilitation Hospital in Asheville to re-learn how to speak and regain her motor skills. She had to learn how to write with her left hand because of the extent of the accident injuries to her right side. But the nightmare most certainly didn't end there.


Colon cancer ran in her family, and she faced a partial colectomy at age 20. When she was 26, she learned she had Graves disease. At 28, she had to have a full colectomy, but suffered major complications, including a MRSA infection (a strain of staph infection that is extremely resistant to antibiotics).


Surgeries didn't stop there. She had two C-Section surgeries to birth her two sons (Christopher, now 5, and Micheal, now 2) at age 33 and 36. Next she needed ankle surgery at 34 and gallbladder surgery at 37.It's hard to imagine one person enduring so many challenges so young - and surviving. Martin can't explain how she got through it all."I don't know. Maybe it's just inner strength," she says. "I've always kind of been a self-motivated kind of person. ... I've learned from myself that I am an extremely strong person. I'm not somebody who will crumble at something."

A tally of the surgeries/illnesses Martin has faced: Exploratory surgery and physical therapy at 19; partial colectomy at 20; Graves Disease at 26; full colectomy, MRSA and takedown surgery to complete the colectomy process at 28; C-section at 33; ankle surgeries at 34; C-section at 36; and gallbladder surgery at 37. Part of getting through it all may be related to the fact that Martin never asked, "Why is this happening to me?" "That never entered my mind. I can remember thinking, just because I've had this happen, doesn't mean that something else isn't going to happen," she says.


Her experiences with physical therapy, especially at Thoms Rehabilitation Hospital, ultimately led her to want to help others the way they have helped her for so many years. After her car accident, Martin longed to return to a "normal" life as she watched former classmates earn their degrees and progress through life."I was really frustrated because I didn't have a goal, or even any idea of what to do," she says, explaining that by this time, many of her friends were already getting their college degrees. "Through my own therapy, I feel like I developed a bond with my physical therapists."After seeing a career counselor and taking tests to determine her interests, "I decided that getting an associate's degree in physical therapy would be the way for me to go," she says.

After beginning her career in physical therapy, she met the man she would marry, Tim Martin, and tied the knot in 1995.When she had been working in physical therapy for about seven years, she and Tim looked into opening a non-medical home care service, where clients could be helped with cleaning, meals, hygiene assistance and shopping, among other services."I had never heard of this kind of service," Martin says. "I just knew it would work."They opened a franchise called Visiting Angels and haven't looked back. And the business is a success.


To this day, Martin is still affected by health issues. She still has a slight case of double vision that gives her trouble when staring at the computer screen or reading a book. Her left ankle still gives her trouble. And she has arthritis in her right knee and hip. But she still hits the gym two to three days a week. Martin feels as though exercise might have aided her recovery. "It kind of has re-taught my body normal movement," she says. It has been trying for Martin because she can't do all of the activities that she used to enjoy, such as running or swimming. She is deaf in her left ear, which makes it difficult to hear in certain situations.But these obstacles haven't stopped her from enjoying life or doing things many people shudder at the thought of doing.


In fact, in 1994, Martin did something the vast majority of the population hasn't tried. She went skydiving from a small plane at 12,500 feet altitude with a fellow physical therapist."It was really unbelievable. It all seemed very surreal but it was great!" she says. "I'm glad I did it!"


Though she doesn't feel like she will ever truly be "normal," she has always maintained a positive outlook on life."It's almost eerie in a way, like there's a guardian angel, or somebody directing my life in the ways that it's gone, and for years I've felt that way," she says sincerely. "I have a very blessed life.""Living to Tell About It: The Pursuit of Normalcy," published by LuLu.com, is a quick read and you won't want to put it down. It details her story from high school on, chronicling her ups and downs, experiences and relationships.

Martin really decided to write about her life when she went to her 20th high school reunion last year. Although she had given thought to writing her story before, it was after former classmate and valedictorian Furman McDonald, who is now a doctor at the Mayo Clinic, encouraged her to put a book together.


"I guess his approval made me kind of feel that maybe it is worth writing a book," Martin says. She and her husband looked for writing services online and contacted Writers in the Sky, based in Nashville, Tenn. Working with the agency, Martin began the book in November 2007 and finished four months later in March."Unfortunately, we weren't able to really go into a lot of detail about every incident," Martin says. "There was just so much that happened, we couldn't do much more than just touch on things."


After reading Martin's book, friend and fellow HHS graduate Karen Lewis was inspired to begin writing a screenplay about Martin's life. Although Lewis had heard about the beginning of Martin's health problems, she didn't realize how much more happened in Martin's life until she read the book."When I read the book, I was just taken with the story," Lewis says. Now she is about 30 pages into the screenplay. "The way I've done it so far is starting off where she did in the book while she was in college, but then doing flashbacks in high school to kind of set the stage for the person she was to kind of make people understand how her life really has changed."


Martin offers a tidbit of advice for prevailing despite numerous challenges. She says: "When you're faced with what you feel like is an insurmountable obstacle, ... persevere, and know that whatever situation it is you're in or whatever you're doing, it will go away - it'll pass. The sun always comes up tomorrow."The book is available for purchase online at Barnes & Noble, Amazon and www.lulu.com/content/2193894. The video trailer for the book can be found at http://youtube.com/watch?v=icJTWmtpWDI. To see Martin's blog, visit www.amy-y-martin.blogspot.com.

Friday, May 23, 2008

Press Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT Amy Martin
VisitingAngelsNC@aol.com
www.amy-y-martin.blogspot.com

AMY MARTIN’S FIRST BOOK PROVIDES HOPE THROUGH LIFE’S CHALLENGES

Wife, Mother and Caregiver Shares Insights Gained from Amazing Series of Medical and Family Crises

CHARLOTTE, NC – May 23, 2008 – Amy Martin has experienced many medical challenges in a life that has barely spanned forty years, only one of which would have been considered a major health crisis for any person. In her first offering as an author, Ms. Martin lets us into her thoughts as she deals with each new blow to her health, and shares the insights she has gained on facing all of life’s challenges. Her memoir, Living to Tell About It, A Pursuit of Normalcy (ISBN Number: 978-1-4357-1449-6) has just been released.

Amy Martin’s first medical nightmare started at the age of nineteen, when she experienced a stroke upon exiting the pool on her college campus. As she writes in the first chapter, “I came up to the surface and experienced an excruciating pain above my right eye … Little did I know this would be the beginning of a long journey.” As Mrs. Martin shares with the readers, she was an athlete who appeared the picture of health. Who thinks of a teenager as being prone to a stroke while swimming laps in the pool? This striking scenario of the first chapter automatically reminds the reader that nothing in life can be taken for granted.

Living to Tell About It goes on to explain Amy Martin’s struggles with a partial and later a full colectomy, a resulting MRSA infection, head trauma from a severe car accident followed by intensive and lengthy physical therapy, Graves’ disease, gallbladder surgery and the death of her mother. Amy’s story unfolds in a chronological fashion, meeting the readers during her freshman year at North Carolina State and bringing us to her current life nearly twenty years later as wife and mother of two sons. Ms. Martin currently serves as the Director of Visiting Angels, a senior home care agency, in her home state.

Martin will discuss the release of Living to Tell about it, A Pursuit of Normalcy as a guest on Writers in the Sky Podcast (WITS). The online show about writing, publishing and marketing books provides information about the industry to book lovers and writers alike. Amy Martin employed Writers in the Sky to assist with the process of preparing and publishing her memoir, and will discuss this working relationship during her interview with host Sarah Moore. Martin’s interview is scheduled for May 23, 2008 and will be available for download on iTunes as well as from http://yvonneperry.blogspot.com, where many other shows are also archived.

Living to Tell About It, A Pursuit of Normalcy can be purchased through Amazon.com, BarnesandNoble.com, and www.lulu.com or by request at your favorite bookstore.