Stroke Victim Sets, Realizes Lofty Goal

Presque Isle, ME, October 19, 2009 --(PR.com)-- The story sounds as if it had come from one of director Frank Capra’s heart-warming films. Instead, it is a true-life story of the early twenty-first century.

After being stricken two years ago, stroke victim Stephan Zimmermann, 63, set the goal of writing a novel to help his recovery. The stroke affected his mobility and speech.

“Many stroke sufferers would simply have given in to the consequences of the terrible disease,” Zimmermann said. “I was simply unwilling just to be another medical statistic!”

Two and half years later, the former instructor, professor and co-founder of Panaxus, Inc., an entrepreneurial venture, released his 376-page novel, “No Rapture.”

“The book is spiritual,” Zimmermann said from his home in northern Maine during a recent interview. “While set at a religious conference in Damascus, Syria, ‘No Rapture,’ is intended as a wake-up call to all the major faiths, Christianity, Judaism and Islam, to heed today’s world-wide problems of man and nature.”

The book pits the three protagonists of the book against the natural disaster of an earthquake in the ancient city while facing the constant threat of war in the Middle East.

Damascus has played a pivotal role for thousands of years in the region, and became a major center for religious activity for the three western faiths for centuries.

In an unusual gesture for a novel, Zimmermann is donating part of the proceeds from the book to charity. The book was released through Lulu.com, with Panaxus providing marketing consulting.

“I have chosen the Kids Creating Peace organization to donate a dollar for every copy of the book sold to the public,” Zimmermann stated. “I’ve initially targeted ten thousand copies of the novel. This may be ambitious for a self-published book without major backing, but if we adults don’t solve our social, political or religious problems, perhaps our children will. The readers will decide. ”

Kids Creating Peace helps at-risk Israeli and Palestinian children in the war-torn area. It provides both physical and spiritual help to foster mutual understanding.

The volunteer organization operates under the Spirituality For Kids Foundation (www.sfk.org), an international non-profit group empowering children and teens throughout the world. It counts celebrities such as Donna Karan, Demi Moore and Madonna among its supporters.

Contact:

Stephan Zimmermann
Panaxus@panaxus.com
Presque Isle, ME 04769

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Panaxus, Inc.
Stephan Zimmermann
207-540-1044
www.panaxus.com
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