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arts / rec.arts.sf.written / R.I.P. Cheryl Suzanne Pahz, 72, in May 2021 (co-author of McAngel, 2009)

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o R.I.P. Cheryl Suzanne Pahz, 72, in May 2021 (co-author of McAngel, 2009)Lenona

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R.I.P. Cheryl Suzanne Pahz, 72, in May 2021 (co-author of McAngel, 2009)

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Subject: R.I.P. Cheryl Suzanne Pahz, 72, in May 2021 (co-author of McAngel, 2009)
From: lenona...@yahoo.com (Lenona)
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 by: Lenona - Thu, 6 Oct 2022 17:56 UTC

https://www.independentauthornetwork.com/jim--cheryl-pahz.html
(covers and synopses of fiction mostly for adults - all post-2007? Some are fantasies. One horror novel was written by her husband only. Four were co-authored by Cheryl.)

The Last Adventure Box / co-authored by her husband in 2013
(Young-adult fiction)

"Josh is attending medical school in Florida and engaged to a beautiful girl when the Adventure Box arrives, and his well-planned life takes a major detour. Josh and his brother Erik have received adventure boxes from their grandfather in Michigan for years. The boxes helped bridge the distance between Michigan and Florida, and kept their grandfather a part of their lives. Each box was lovingly filled with treats and gifts, and arrived regularly until a year ago when his grandfather died.

"With his grandfather gone, how can this adventure Box be explained and what does it mean? Who sent the box, and why? The return address says Heaven! Equally puzzling are the contents. The box contains three clues: a feather, a watch and a map.

"Seeking answers, Josh travels to Michigan and enters a world of buried treasure, African swords and an ancient curse. Along the way he finds true love and something important that he almost lost: himself. His grandfather had been correct. The Last Adventure Box was the most important one of all."

McAngel /co-authored by her husband
(Magical Realism)

"Ben and Julie Pearson are faced with a dilemma. A bizarre favor has been asked of them by a terminally ill relative and the young couple promise to grant the favor. To fulfill the request, Ben and Julie must go to considerable effort and expense and they are not certain they ever really intend to keep their promise.

"This is a favor wrapped in a mystery and will take the Pearsons from the Florida Panhandle to Mount Pleasant, Michigan.

"Deciding whether to keep their promise, Ben and Julie are advised by a seemingly homeless old man who seems always to be at the local McDonald's. But this time, beneath his usual jibber-jabber are words that seem coherent and insightful."

https://www.clarkfuneralchapel.com/memorials/cheryl-pahz/4623135/obit.php?&printable=true
(includes old photo)

PAHZ, CHERYL SUZANNE, age 72, of Mt. Pleasant, Michigan, passed away on May 16, 2021, from complications of Alzheimer’s Disease at Woodland Hospice. Cheryl was born on January 29, 1949, in Ypsilanti, Michigan.

Cheryl is survived by James Pahz, her husband of 52 years. She leaves behind two daughters, Elida Pahz (Gilder), of Miami, Florida, and Lisa Anderson (Keith), of Mt. Pleasant, Michigan. She is also survived by four grandsons, Kevin, Erik, and Josh Diaz-Pahz, and Maximus Anderson.

Cheryl worked at Central Michigan University for many years in the technical services department of the library. She was the co-founder of Children’s Hope Adoption Service with her husband James, placing more than one thousand children with permanent loving families. Cheryl was a creative individual with numerous artistic abilities. She won a prestigious art contest while traveling in Israel and her artwork is still used to encourage people to visit that country. In her free time Cheryl also liked to write and co-authored several books with her husband Jim. She is preceded in death by her parents, Morris and Shirley McConnell.
__________________________________________________

WRITINGS (partial list only):

(Under name Cheryl Goldfeder; with husband Jim Goldfeder) The Girl Who Wouldn't Talk (juvenile), National Association of the Deaf (Silver Spring, MD), 1973.

(Under name Cheryl Pahz; with husband Jim Pahz; and illustrator) Robin Sees a Song (juvenile), National Association of the Deaf (Silver Spring, MD), 1977.

Will Love Be Enough?, National Association of the Deaf (Silver Spring, MD), 1977.

(With husband James Alon Pahz) Total Communication: The Meaning behind the Movement to Expand Educational Opportunities for Deaf Children, C. C Thomas (Springfield, IL), 1978.

From muse.jhu.edu:

....Robin Sees A Song, Jim Pahz and Cheryl Pahz, 44 pp., People Potential Series 2, National Association of the Deaf, Silver Spring, Md., 1977. Robin Sees A Song is a heartwarming, fanciful story poem about a little deaf girl named Robin who, after a lot of wondering and questioning, discovers the meaning of a song. This is the second story about Robin, who was first introduced in the book, The Girl Who Wouldn't Talk. The story line in Robin Sees A Song is unique. The little girl is puzzled about just what a song is. She poses the question to her father. He replies, "Now I'd say, if I had my choice, to sing is like doing a dance with your voice." Robin asks her mother.. She says, "Well, I've always found a song is like painting a feeling with sound." Robin still doesn't understand. Finally, a dream figure, the Song itself, comes to Robin in the night and whisks her off to a far away land where she experiences songs through sight, touch, and smell. Robin learns a lesson important for all of us—a song (like so many things in life) is what you want it to be. The author's use of a deaf girl as the main character allows us to perceive part of the world as a deaf child might see it, giving the story's message greater impact. The artwork greatly enhances the text, with illustrations on practically every page. This book could be an important part of either a unit on handicapped people, specifically the deaf, or a unit on poetry. Children aged eight and up would find the story appealing and understandable...

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