Kath's miracle / Kathleen Evans and Sarah Minns.

By: Evans, KathleenContributor(s): Minns, SarahMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Camberwell, Vic. : Michael Joseph, 2012Description: x, 255 p., [16] p. of plates : ill. (chiefly col.), ports. ; 24 pISBN: 9781921901195 (pbk.)Subject(s): Evans, Kathleen | MacKillop, Mary Saint, 1842-1909 | Cancer -- Patients -- Australia -- Biography | Cancer patients' writings | Trust in God -- Christianity -- Biography | Miracles -- Case studiesDDC classification: 362.196994 Summary: MODERN & CONTEMPORARY FICTION (POST C 1945). Kathleen Evans was an ordinary woman from an ordinary suburb on the NSW central coast. Although a committed Catholic, she wasn't excessively pious and had even had a decade-long disagreement with her Church after her philandering husband divorced her. Then in 1993, after finding love for the second time, Kath was diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer; the diagnosis: terminal. She tried to make peace with her past and her God but was desperate to survive long enough to see her youngest son finish school. She and a group of supporters sent their prayers to Sister Mary MacKillop, one of our country's finest educators and founder of the Josephite nuns. And Kath's prayers were answered. Ten months after her diagnosis, X-rays revealed that Kath's cancer had vanished. She was completely cured, all without any medical intervention.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)

MODERN & CONTEMPORARY FICTION (POST C 1945). Kathleen Evans was an ordinary woman from an ordinary suburb on the NSW central coast. Although a committed Catholic, she wasn't excessively pious and had even had a decade-long disagreement with her Church after her philandering husband divorced her. Then in 1993, after finding love for the second time, Kath was diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer; the diagnosis: terminal. She tried to make peace with her past and her God but was desperate to survive long enough to see her youngest son finish school. She and a group of supporters sent their prayers to Sister Mary MacKillop, one of our country's finest educators and founder of the Josephite nuns. And Kath's prayers were answered. Ten months after her diagnosis, X-rays revealed that Kath's cancer had vanished. She was completely cured, all without any medical intervention.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.