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Daughter Finds ‘Life’ After Death in Award-Winning Novel


In July 2011, Emma Mebane, age 19, died in her sleep from no known cause. As her family says, Emma died “on the threshold of her dreams.” She was home on summer break after her freshman year in college and spent the evening having pizza with her brother and dad and facetiming with her sister and mom in England. In the morning, Emma’s living spark had vanished.

But Emma’s mother Donna could not accept that she was gone. She wrote: I had a vague idea of heaven, but I couldn’t envision my daughter there. I couldn’t imagine her in some pristine place, wearing a flowing white gown, possibly sprouting angel wings and trading her signature “Wait … what?” for sudden wisdom.

With this thought, Donna began to imagine a world in which Emma could continue “to laugh, love and, yes, live, in a place that wouldn’t scare her, change her, or overwhelm her.” Over the next months, Donna created this world, that Emma came to call AFTER, in an award-winning book called Tomorrow Comes. The book begins with this passage:

Emma opened her eyes. She was surrounded by a blaze of color, and she was filled with an overwhelming sense of peace. The sun streaming through her window was unusually bright, and her room was bursting with sensation …

Tomorrow Comes
by Donna Mebane

Wordsmith Associates worked closely with Donna from the beginning, editing and organizing her work as she turned chapters over and designing the eventual publication that was released in 2014. Tomorrow Comes has since gone on to receive 11 awards – from 6 major award competitions in 8 different genres and 3 special categories, including best first novel and grand prize finalist.


Kirkus Reviews calls Tomorrow Comes “an emotional novel about grief and the enduring power of love after death.”

SEE ALL PROFESSIONAL REVIEWS OF TOMORROW COMES


CLICK HERE to review excerpts of the netbook version of Tomorrow Comes.

Availability

Paperback – ISBN 978-0-9857608-2-3 – 5.25″ wide x 8″ tall – 266 pages – List Price $10.99
Kindle – ASIN B00OA8H5NI – 966 KB – List Price $2.99

Individual copies of Tomorrow Comes are available from Amazon and other booksellers.

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WRITINGS ON THE WALL

  • Nature fits all her children with something to do, He who would write and can’t write, can surely review. –James Russell Lowell, A Fable for Critics
  • Watch your thoughts, they become your words. Watch your words, they become your action. Watch your actions, they become your habits. Watch your habits, they become your character. Watch your character, it becomes your destiny. –Anonymous
  • Good words are worth much … and cost little. –George Herbert, Jacula Prudentum
  • Sweet religion makes a rhapsody of words. –Shakespeare, Hamlet
  • Words are our most inexhaustible source of magic, capable of both inflicting injury, and remedying it. –Albus Dumbledore, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
  • And many a word, at random spoken, may soothe a wound or heart that’s broken. –Sir Walter Scott, Lord of the Isles
  • Omit needless words. –William Strunk, Jr, The Elements of Style
  • The only thing I was fit for was to be a writer, and this notion rested solely on my suspicion that I would never be fit for real work and that writing didn’t require any. –Russell Baker, Growing Up
  • Man’s word is God in man. –Alfred Lord Tennyson, “Idylls of the King,” The Coming of Arthur
  • How many verses have I thrown into the fire because the one peculiar word, the wanted most, was irrecoverably lost. –Walter Savage Landor, Verses Why Burnt
  • How long a time lies in one little word! Such is the breath of kings. –Shakespeare, King Richard II
  • Words are like leaves and, where they most abound, much fruit of sense beneath is rarely found. –Alexander Pope, An Essay on Criticism
  • Word is a shadow of deed. –Democritus
  • Once a word has been allowed to escape, it cannot be recalled. –Horace, Epistles
  • The most essential gift for a good writer is a built-in, shock-proof, shit detector. This is the writer’s radar and all great writers have had it. –Ernest Hemingway, Paris Review
  • “When I use a word,” Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, “it means just what I choose it to mean—neither more nor less.” “The question is,” said Alice, “whether you can make words mean so many different things.” “The question is,” said Humpty Dumpty, “which is to be master—that’s all.” –Lewis Carroll, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
  • Honeyed words like bees, gilded and sticky, with a little sting. –Elinor Hoyt Wylie, Pretty Words
  • The words of the prophets are written on the subway walls and tenement halls and whispered in the sounds of silence. –Paul Simon, The Sound of Silence
  • Life's like a movie. Write your own ending. Keep believing, keep pretending. –Jim Henson, The Muppet Movie
  • All our words are but crumbs that fall down from the feast of the mind. –Kahlil Gibran, Sand and Foam
  • It is not of so much consequence what you say, as how you say it. Memorable sentences are memorable on account of some irradiating word. –Alexander Smith, “Dreamthorp,” On the Writing of Essays
  • Prête-moi ta plume pour écrire un mot. Lend me your pen to write a word. –Au Clair de la Lune
  • The writer doesn’t want success ... The writer wants to leave a scratch on the wall of oblivion that someone a hundred or a thousand years later will see. Kilroy was here. –William Faulkner, Faulkner in the University
  • I am a Bear of Very Little Brain, and long Words Bother me. –Alan Alexander Milne, Willie-the-Pooh
  • A writer lives in awe of words for they can be cruel or kind, and they can change their meanings right in front of you. They pick up flavors and odors like butter in a refrigerator. –John Steinbeck, “In Awe of Words”
  • In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God. –The Common Gospel, “Eternal Word”
  • My words fly up, my thoughts remain below. Words without thoughts –never to heaven go. –Shakespeare, Hamlet
  • So is a word better than a gift. –Apocrypha
  • Speech is civilization itself. The word, even the most contradictory word, preserves contact. It is silence which isolates. –Thomas Mann, The Magic Mountain
  • To call forth a concept, a word is needed; to portray a phenomenon, a concept is needed. All three mirror one and the same reality. –Antoine Laurent Lavoisier, Traité Elémentaire de Chimie
  • Choice word and measured phrase… above the reach of ordinary men. –William Wordsworth, Resolution and Independence
  • Light dies before thy uncreating word; Thy hand, great Anarch! lets the curtain fall, and universal darkness buries all. –Alexander Pope, The Dunciad
  • In the world of words, the imagination is one of the forces of nature. –Wallace Stevens, Opus Posthumous

CLICK HERE to see these writings on the wall in a larger size.

Printing in Perspective

Printing in Perspective
Your life is made up of two dates and a dash. Make the most of the dash.

Make the most of your life - your dash! - and share what you learn with others.

The kingdom of God does not come with observation ... for, behold, the kingdom of God is within you. -Jesus the Messiah. The Common Gospel ("Final Journey)

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