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Castles On The Sand Part 33

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Sometime between when Jared and I actually started to talk to each other, and when Trevor and I moved back to White Rock for Trevor's job, Jared survived a brain tumor. This came out in a conversation in which he and Emily were laughing about the experience, because that's the sort of people they were, able to laugh when most people would cry. The facts are as follows: Jared started to show symptoms of a brain tumor, which were misdiagnosed spectacularly by the ER doctor, who for some reason thought "food poisoning" would explain why he had seizures. The sort of tumor he had is not the kind a person ought to survive, but he did thanks to his intelligent, determined, and resourceful wife who set out on a crusade to find doctors who could help them (there's more than a little bit of Emily in Madison).

"If they called me by my first name, I called them by theirs," was one of her vetting techniques, "and if they didn't like it, I knew they weren't worth seeing." She also demanded that they know how to say, "I don't know," and walked out on anyone who told her that her husband was as good as deceased already. Her quest eventually took her and Jared to northern California, where he had the tumor removed, and at the time I found out about this, he was in such good health that this story was a shock.

Oh, and his wife, Emily? She was also pregnant for part of that time, and had a newborn for the rest of it. It's thanks to her that he lived as long as he did, and a tribute to both of them that they could joke about it to the very end. The tumor eventually returned and took Jared from us when he was only thirty-six. His wife kept her spirits up in public enviably. I don't know anyone else who would post "The Ten Funniest Things About Being a Widow" on Facebook, but it's hard to think of a more fitting tribute to Jared. (It was a response to his list of the "Top Ten Funniest Things About Having a Brain Tumor.") I started to write this book back in January, and could soon tell that I was still processing his death. Jared wasn't the kind of close friend who inspired me to cry my eyes out at his pa.s.sing, he was a long term acquaintance who features in so many of my memories that his absence leaves a trail of holes in the past and changes the universe so that it'll never quite feel right again. He and I joked about how Los Alamos County had remodeled all of the parks we'd played in as children. They took down the three story rocket s.h.i.+p that we used to climb to the top of and shake as hard as we could. They uprooted the Cinderella's coach that we could, with practice, scale the outside of and again, shake it as hard as we could (yes, okay, that was a very regular pattern; it wasn't a mystery why this equipment was removed). They got rid of the T-tunnel, which was a section of what was probably sewage pipe rigged up on the elementary school playground. Older students managed to yank its rebar anchor out of the ground and turn the whole structure up on end.

And now another childhood memory has been torn out and set aside. While it's easy to see Jared in John Britton, the truth is, he's in nearly all of the characters to one extent or another. Siraj, actually, has the most obvious similarities that I can see, with his sense of humor and ability both to remain deadpan while saying outlandish things and restate the obvious in a way that is so accurate, it's hilarious. John has his compa.s.sion and principles. Madison has his charity and resilience. Kailie has his unending desire to enjoy life (she's just doesn't know how to do that, in actual fact.) Carson has his faith. JP has his intelligence. Alex has his devotion to his family. Two out of three of them have his impeccable taste in compa.s.sionate, self-sufficient women.

More to the point, the story came about as I was processing what kind of change a good man can make to the world that is largely out of his control. John can't be the protagonist of this story because he arrives late to the situation. His lack of relations.h.i.+p with Madison means his hands are tied as he watches her make mistakes. Jared can't be a protagonist any more because he was taken from us early, but just as John was able to work with what little he had, Jared can continue to change the world.



He's the sort of person who made Earth a better place just by being the principled, loving, and dedicated man that he was, and by remembering him, we can all do our best to finish what he started.

E.M. Tippetts.

July 5, 2012.

Thanks for reading. If you're wondering whether there are more stories I'd be willing to tell about Madison, her family, and how things ultimately turn out with her new boyfriend, the answer is yes. If enough people are interested, I'll happily write a sequel.

If you enjoyed this book, please consider leaving a review on Amazon, Barnes and n.o.ble, or Goodreads. Nothing drives book sales more effectively.

Other books by me include:.

Time and Eternity.

Paint Me True.

Someone Else's Fairytale.

Each of those is a stand alone and not part of a series, and if you are reading the Kindle edition of this book, there are links at the very end, after the Acknowledgments. Right now I'm working on a sequel to Someone Else's Fairytale, which has been my most popular book to date. For updates on that and other projects, go to my website: www.emtippetts.com.

I also write science fiction and fantasy as Emily Mah. To find out more about the short stories I've sold and to find my blog, go to www.emilymah.com For this book, it's very hard to choose whom to thank first, so I'll go in alphabetical order: Emily Lyman gave me access to the poem Jared wrote in the dedication and the beautiful speeches that were given at Jared's funeral - which I wasn't able to attend, as I was living in London with two small children to care for. Mary Mah is still the best typo catcher I've ever met, outdoing even full time copyeditors. The typos in this book are all my fault, probably last minute additions that didn't get proofed by her. Char Peery remains my most ridiculously loyal friend, reading rough drafts that make me want to cry and giving insightful, honest, and constructive criticism. This is why you see her in all of my acknowledgments.

Next I need to thank all of the Kickstarter backers who gave so generously to my campaign to get this book reviewed by Kirkus. They are, in the order they pledged: Samantha Ling, Stephanie Cowart, Linda DeMeulemeester, Rebecca J. Carlson, Neile Graham, Susan Kaye Quinn, Emily Lyman, Catherine Burkholder, Susanne Brokaw, Melanie Goldmund, Donna L. Sadd, Ike Tippetts, Rob Jagnow, Eowyn Langholf, Bradley King, Whitney Farnsworth, Emily Forrington, Emily Debenham, Cindy Avery, Daniel Whiteson, Stephanie Spier, Kathryn Parsons, S.S. Bazinet, Caroline Aubry, Riccardo Mainetti, Sarah Mah, Dean and Teddie Tippetts, Thomas Shepherd, Debbie Chrissinger, Stacey Millett Tippetts, Mary Lynn Pack, Emerald Christensen Griffin, Ian Parkinson, David C. Ca.s.sidy, Sh.e.l.ley Keesler, Sandra Mah, and Melody Anthony. I thought Kickstarter would be a humbling experience that would require me to spend a whole month begging for money. It was humbling, but not in the way I predicted. These kind individuals funded it in full in five days.

I'd also like to thank those who helped me with the cover design, Jenn Reese, of Tiger Bright Studios, who designed my two previous covers as well, and Sima Vaziry, who took my draft cover to the final version you see on this book.

Last, but definitely not least, are my readers who read my rough draft and told me everything I've done wrong. I've mentioned Char and my mother, Mary. I'd also like to think Jane Stewart, a new friend who wrote me a wonderful, detailed critique, and Trevor Tippetts, my longsuffering husband, who reads chick lit novels on his Kindle on the way to work. Now that's love.

Other Books by E.M. Tippetts (www.emtippetts.com):.

Short Stories Written as Emily Mah (www.emilymah.com):.

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A curse that makes a man unable to die, also prevents him from living. He feels no pain and no emotion, merely drifting through existence like a ghost until he collides with a young woman with the inborn power to change his fate. Payton and sixteen of his clan members and allies were afflicted with the curse back in the seventeenth century, only not all of them consider it an affliction. When Samantha, a descendant of their bitter enemies, arrives in modern day Scotland, she steps into a centuries old feud between men who want to live again and those who don't dare feel the crus.h.i.+ng guilt for the sins they committed so long ago.

German indie author, Emily Bold, writes historical and paranormal romance. Her first English translation, The Curse, is a complex and compelling book with a story that spans three centuries. While we've all seen the immortal guy in love with a mortal woman storyline before, Bold packs the pages with a rich backstory full of historical detail about clan warfare in medieval Scotland, something that the main character, Samantha, knows little about. She is on a modern day exchange program in a small Scottish town when she is nearly knocked over by Payton, who enjoys riding his bike at breakneck speed. It's a trivial amus.e.m.e.nt for someone who can't actually break his neck, only his fleeting encounter with Sam evokes real, physical pain.

This book is written in a mix of British English and Scots dialect. In choosing a translator, Bold wisely went with someone fluent in Scots dialect, able to write it in a way that all of us English speakers should understand. While it is possible at points to see that this is a translation, the underlying bone structure and emotional core of this book is first cla.s.s. I'm very much looking forward to the sequel, which just came out in German. Everyone buy this book so she can afford to have the next one translated!

Castles on the Sand is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fict.i.tiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, business establishments or locales is entirely coincidental.

No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. All rights reserved.

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