Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Meg O'Brien

From Nancy Baker Jacobs:
Meg O'Brien died on Saturday, Dec. 6, of complications following heart surgery. She had been living in Houston, Texas, recently to be near her daughter Kaiti and granddaughter Emily. Born in New Jersey, Meg also lived in several California cities and in Washington State over the past couple of decades. She was the author of the Jessica James mystery series and numerous suspense novels. Most recently she wrote under contract for MIRA Books. Meg loved writing and always told a good story that entertained her many readers.

Here's one eerie event her daughter Amy thought mystery writers might appreciate. Twenty-four hours after Meg died, her son's cell phone rang and its readout indicated that the call was coming from Meg's cell phone. Her children later found Meg's cell phone packed inside her suitcase and, indeed, its readout indicated that it had placed that particular call at that particular time, but no one can explain just how or why. Certainly Meg would have enjoyed contemplating this kind of mystery.

Meg O'Brien leaves behind five children, four grandchildren and several great-grandchildren, along with her many friends and a host of fans, all of whom will miss her greatly.

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3 Comments:

At December 9, 2008 9:52 AM , Blogger Janet A said...

This is not the first time I have heard of the dead calling on a cell phone. I have a friend whose brother's number showed on calls for months after he died. He also moved rocks in the garden, but that is another story.

 
At December 17, 2008 9:03 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

I'm Meg's grandson, or rather I called her "Nana". There's a lot more to her death than it seems. I had been calling my mother, Robin, almost every day while Nana was in the hospital. Apparently, from what Aunt Amy and her had said, their was quite a screw up at the hospital.

On Thanksgiving day my grandmother went into cardiac arrest, most likely from choking on her food. The nurses or whoever was supposed to be monitoring the alarms weren't around. She stayed in that position for over ten minutes. I believe they said it was actually around 15 minutes or so.

The surgery on her heart went excellent and the doctors even gave her another 20 years. If it wasn't for this screw up, which I'm personally furious about, she would have lived to write another day.

From being in cardiac arrest for such a long time it caused massive brain damage, which in turn, sealed her fate.

There's a lot I could say about Nana Meg, but for now I'll just say that I miss her a ton and I'll never forget what happened.

I hope all of her readers appreciated her as much as I did.

JD-

 
At December 19, 2008 10:53 AM , Blogger Janet Rudolph said...

I am so sorry for your loss. What a terrible state of affairs. Nana Meg was a wonderful person and this seems so unfair. Thank you for posting. My sincere sympathy to you and your family.

 

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