News
National brain tumour research funding needs to increase to £35 million a year
Woman pens book to help children navigate grief

A
woman, who turned to writing to help deal with the death of her father, has
penned a heartwarming children’s book with sales supporting research into brain
tumours.
Ash
Hunter has written her first book, A Different Day, which provides a
sensitive and relatable resource for children navigating the complex emotions
surrounding death and grief. It is a tale of friendship between a puppy called
Lilo, a character based loosely on Ash’s golden retriever, who bears the same
name, and her best friend, Mo.
She
will be donating £1 from the sale of each book to Brain Tumour Research,
inspired by her father, Kenny, who died in April 2020, aged 51.
Kenny
was diagnosed with thyroid cancer a week before his 40th birthday in
January 2009. The father-of-two had his thyroid and lymph nodes removed, and
part of a lung four years later, but went on to develop nine secondary brain
tumours.
Ash
is hoping to raise at least £2,740 to sponsor a
day of research at one of our Centres
of Excellence.
She
said: “The reason I feel so strongly about supporting Brain Tumour Research
is because Dad’s brain tumours were the point at which we were told there was
nothing that could be done.
“We
always knew his cancer was terminal but we deemed him as living with cancer.
The brain tumours are when things changed and we said ‘oh, he’s dying of it
now’.”
Ash’s
writing started after a counselling session as a way to deal with her grief
over losing her dad. She added: “If I can help just one person deal with the
ideas that no one lives forever and loss gets easier over time, then I will
feel like I’ve achieved something.”
To
purchase a copy of A Different Day, click
here.
Related
reading: