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Rocking the Pink

Finding Myself on the Other Side of Cancer

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In 2008, just as Laura Roppé was poised to burst onto the music scene, her doctor called her with news that left her spinning—she had been diagnosed with an extremely aggressive form of breast cancer. Just days earlier, she had signed a dream-come-true contract with a record label; now, she wasn’t even sure how much longer she had to live.

Never one to back down to a challenge, however, Roppé gathered her courage, took stock of her priorities, and made a decision: Cancer may take my hair, she told herself, but that’s all it’s getting. More than a cancer journey, Rocking the Pink is a quirky, charming, and poignant ode to love, friendship, and music. Roppé is unflinchingly honest and unfailingly funny as she tells the story of her odyssey: from childhood dreamer and giddy valet parker to the Hollywood stars to disillusioned lawyer, wife, and mother; from budding songwriter and late-blooming recording artist to determined cancer survivor. 

Full of raw emotion and humor that will make you laugh through your tears, Rocking the Pink is a chronicle of discovering one's true self through life’s difficult circumstances—and a testament to the hang-in-tough, take-no-prisoners attitude it takes to kick cancer’s butt.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 23, 2012
      A UCLA-trained drama student turned corporate lawyer recounts her erratic, ultimately transcendent tale of being floored by breast cancer—only to reconnect to what really mattered to her. Roppé, a California native, was certain as a kid that Hollywood was in her future, even roping a brief but important speaking part as Girl One in Oliver Stone’s film The Doors—except that law school intervened, then a stressful career as a civil litigator, marriage and motherhood to two girls. By her mid-30s, Roppé had decided to join a rock band and start singing again, which segued into recording her own songs and making a full-length album with a vanity producer. Yet just as her single “Mama Needs a Girls’ Night Out” began to get some radio time, and she had signed a contract with a London-based record label, Roppé was diagnosed with an aggressive cancer called triple negative breast cancer, requiring an extensive round of chemotherapy and radiation. Looping back and forth in time, Roppé’s narrative can sometimes be flighty, but she makes up for it with enormous energy, humor, and unsinkable optimism.

    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2012
      A cancer diagnosis almost derails a woman's journey to rock stardom. After more than 10 years as a corporate lawyer, Roppe finally listened to her heart, quit her job and began making music in earnest. Her dreams were put on hold, however, when her doctor gave her a devastating diagnosis of breast cancer. With the support of her steadfast husband and two young daughters, Roppe resolved to do whatever it took to beat the cancer and take the stage once more. The author provides several interesting stories, including a particularly detailed account of her work as an extra on Oliver Stone's The Doors (1991), but many of her early anecdotes have little to do with either her burgeoning new career as a rock singer or her struggle as a cancer patient. For example, readers unclear on how to pronounce her last name will find several paragraphs discussing it. Even when directly discussing her cancer diagnosis, Roppe fails to adequately address how it temporarily derailed her musical aspirations. She is also quick to point out the positives in her situation, which can be inspiring, but she never explores the darker aspects of her battle. The later chapters begin with e-mails from her online buddy Jane, a fellow breast-cancer victim. Unfortunately for the author, Jane's e-mails about her life are more open and engaging than the majority of the author's narrative. Some readers may find hope from Roppe's successful battle with cancer, but her self-indulgent tone may leave unsatisfied.

      COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      February 1, 2012

      Leaving behind a law career that didn't suit her inner rock star, 37-year-old Roppe (pronounced Ropay) had just signed a record deal in 2008 when the news came that she had triple-negative breast cancer, a rare and aggressive form that made both chemotherapy and radiation imperative. Her childhood dreams of being a professional singer came crashing to a halt. Chapters alternate between Roppe's discussion of cancer and retelling of her past, beginning when she first meets her future husband, Brad, at 14. Her take on life is irreverent, perhaps a bit too cutesy, but Roppe gets through treatment, buoyed by her own song lyrics, which she eventually cuts in vinyl (or silver disc) as her singer-songwriter career takes off and her cancer is vanquished--for the time being. VERDICT More inspirational treatise than disease chronicle, Roppe's book will give women assurance for getting through the worst life throws at them, be it illness or other kinds of loss. And though it might sound trite, Roppe does thank cancer, ultimately, for teaching her that "nothing is insurmountable." Not as cancer-specific as Geralyn Lucas's Why I Wore Lipstick to My Mastectomy, Roppe's title is recommended for people looking for a bit of hope.--Bette-Lee Fox, Library Journal

      Copyright 2012 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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