Maya Blue

A Memoir of Survival

Non-Fiction - Memoir
280 Pages
Reviewed on 01/13/2025
Buy on Amazon

Author Biography

“It was a fairy tale until it wasn’t.” This is what came to mind when I thought about my twenties and thirties. I’d pasted over the real stories as though they were generic captions in a family photo album. “Philip,” “Christmas,” and “Guatemala.” The titles alluded to events that were shocking and almost always dangerous, but I’d put these memories in a box and hidden them in the back of my emotional closet. A life I kept secret. One that made it hard to make friends with people who had families, children, and conventional jobs.

Looking back, I’m amazed I survived any of it, and it makes me sad to think how close I came to losing myself. How sometimes I did things not because I wanted to—things that weren’t always in my best interest—but because I wanted to please my first husband.

My second husband made me feel safe, something that had been only a word in the dictionary, and he gave me the courage to share my story. Writing this book has helped me embrace the parts of myself I surrendered in order to be loved. The ones that allowed me to swallow the worst days of my life for fear of being judged.

I’ve written this book for everyone who’s been afraid to tell their story because speaking your truth is the most valuable power you have. I have a Top 10 Blog for women over 50, 1010ParkPlace.com.

    Book Review

Reviewed by Golder Hazelton for Readers' Favorite

Brenda Coffee’s Maya Blue is a memoir of unusual strength, resilience, resonance, and purpose. Her story reads like a mainstream thriller but her voice is so candid and conversational that readers will invest unconditional trust in even the most alarmingly shocking sections of her narrative. Coffee’s hard-won status as a perpetual survivor on multiple fronts infuses Maya Blue with a tenacity and determination that colors each chapter with the precise cliffhanger energy most often displayed in works of popular fiction. At times, astonished readers will do well to stop reading for a moment and remind themselves that the experiences of this remarkable woman and brilliant storyteller are distilled from real life rather than the sweeping imagination of a titan of fiction.

Maya Blue, a seemingly eternal pigment favored by the ancient Mayans to represent their spiritual center, is the perfect metaphor for Coffee’s extraordinary courage and tenacity. The events and scenery of Maya Blue are truly breathtaking, but perhaps even more so is Coffee’s emotional and psychological journey. She goes from being a capable and highly intelligent young woman through a period of virtual invisibility as the abused wife of an equally remarkable older man who begins as an ideal spouse and gradually becomes lost in the wasteland of addiction. Next comes a potentially soul-restoring journey to the land of the Maya that becomes a literal visit to hell, and an eventual final chapter of true happiness that all too quickly ends in grief. Coffee has lived several lifetimes in the span of one human experience, and those with courage enough to embrace her odyssey in Maya Blue on its physical and spiritual planes are assured of a transformative experience of their own.

Danelle Petersen

Reading Maya Blue: A Memoir of Survival, the first thought that comes to mind is, ‘This is too outrageous to be true; she must be making this up’. But no, from the start this was Brenda Coffee’s reality. Brenda marries young; she’s swept off her feet by the much older Philip Ray, a successful businessman who goes off the rails due to a catastrophic and careless mistake. A mistake that changes the course of her and Philip’s lives forever. The change in Philip is drastic; the sweet man she has known and loved since she first laid eyes on him has become an abusive stranger. Helpless and vulnerable, Brenda knows that she will have to depend on her strength if she wants to survive this horrific new life. From victim to victor, Brenda tells her heartbreaking story in harrowingly graphic detail.

I was intrigued by Brenda Coffee’s life story. She is strong and courageous and took great pains in turning her life around, never mind the odds that were stacked so highly against her. Maya Blue: A Memoir of Survival is a must-read for every woman who has been abused and needs that little bit of inspiration to break free from their captor. Also, I think people who have always wondered why the battered woman doesn’t just leave will find Brenda’s story interesting. Despite her horrific experiences, Brenda has decided to open Pandora's box and stands firm in her pursuit to help others who have experienced what she has. Brenda is a true beacon of light.

Angelique Papayannopoulos

Maya Blue by Brenda Coffee recounts overcoming severe hardships for love and the long journey to regaining her power. At twenty-one, Brenda is living a fairy tale by marrying the older, charismatic, and prominent Philip Ray. At the outset, life is an adventure for Brenda, who is eager to become the woman he can’t live without. In contrast, Philip decides to manufacture cocaine in his basement. Before long, this new enterprise engulfs him to the extent that he becomes a drug addict. Brenda's innovation of the first smokeless cigarettes aims to free Philip from his addiction, yet Philip, consumed by the drug, ultimately falls prey to its fatal consequences. Brenda must come to terms with the outcome of her life and her incredible survival in the Guatemalan jungle.

Brenda Coffee recounts her traumatic experiences in this gripping memoir, which will resonate deeply with women from all backgrounds, especially those who have suffered the loss of a spouse, dealing with mental health issues, sexual abuse, and substance addiction. Maya Blue is written from a place of emotion and is an inspiring message that reflects the enduring spirit of a woman’s ability to reclaim her power, no matter the challenges faced. The story is straightforward and rich in descriptions ranging from the cocaine dungeon to the gloomy bus rides in Guatemala and the horrific jungle events. The author's precise descriptions of the people encountered will astonish the reader. This inspiring and insightful true account of survival is both thought-provoking and captivating. The memoir encompasses themes of love, grief, survival, resilience, trauma, and retribution. Maya Blue is an engrossing read, brimming with grim truths, suspense, and classic moments of realization, and is highly recommended!