The word "cancer" can instantly instil fear and desperation. The disease takes courage and will-power to combat once it has been diagnosed. For Neil and Anne, who had spent over ten years in the French countryside renovating a ruined farmhouse and rejuvenating a hectare of land so that they could be as self-sufficient as possible, their dream life suddenly became a nightmare. In April 2000, Neil was diagnosed with cancer of the duodenum, pancreas and liver, and told he had between three months and a year to live. The medical profession have rarely come across the tenacity with which Neil and Anne met this news, and which resulted in his last MRI scan showing no signs of cancer. This is their story: about cancer, effective treatment, being cured, and the unforeseen aftermath, and about love.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR Anne Morbey grew up in East Africa and the Middle East, the majority of her education being by correspondence course. She was a Wren Women's Royal Naval Service] for a short time on her return to the UK in the mid-1960s, and held a variety of jobs, mainly involving a keyboard. She met Neil a police officer at the time] when she became a Special Constable in North London in 1976. After their marriage the following year, Anne opened a typing service; her clients included writers living overseas, students from all over the UK, and people who could neither read nor write. They moved to rural France in 1989.
Anne has been a photographer, teacher, artist - and writes fiction under the pen name Emma Carlton. As a former member of Mensa, Anne wrote numerous articles about living in France for one of their Special Interest Group newsletters. She lives in the same house that she and Neil bought in 2000 on the outskirts of a village in France.