My daughter Deborah James was a great mother and made the most of her short time on this earth. She achieved so much.

Deborah loved life even as a small girl, Heather, her mum, told me.

“When she was eight I remember her telling me, ‘Mummy, there are just not enough hours in the day to do everything I want to do’,”She recalls.

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Heather James, Deborah James’ mother, said that the family is proud of everything Deborah achievedCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd

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Deborah James as a baby, with mum Heather and father AlistairCredit: sun exclusive

“She loved life and she had the most amazing imagination.

“When she was three, I found her in the lounge – she had torn up sheets of paper and thrown it all around the room.

“When I asked her what she had done, she just replied ‘I’Mummy, I’ve made snow. We’re having a snow day’.

“Another time she emptied an entire wheelbarrow of dirt in the lounge because she wanted us to have an inside garden.”

“We will miss her forever,”Heather says. “She was the one who instigated our next adventure, and brought the sparkle to our lives.

“She had this incredible ability to make something out of nothing.

“As a teenager the best present she ever got was a bag of scrap material from the local fancy dress shop, she turned it into incredible costumes.

“Even as a grown up her favourite shop was Hobbycraft, and Eloise is exactly the same.”

Heather said that one of her most admirable qualities about her eldest daughter was her ability to raise her children Hugo and Eloise.

“She was a very different mum to me and I really respected her for it,”She admitted it. “I was more of a perfectionist – I refused to let her leave the house with odd socks.

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Heather, Deborah’s mother, says that she was energetic as a child.Credit:

“But Deborah would let the kids go out in fancy dress. I’d warn her they would get cold, and she would tell me, ‘they’ll learn’.

“She brought the kids up to learn from their mistakes, I just tried to protect her from making mistakes.”

“I was given this child, and I believe all children are gifts,”She adds.

“I’ve always known she was a bit different, and we are so proud of her and what she achieved in her short life.

“Part of me thinks she knew she would only be in this world for a limited time, and so made the most of every second.”

Ebury, a division of Penguin Random House, will pay £3 from the sale of ‘How To Live When You Could Be Dead’Deborah James, UK to Bowelbabe Fund for Cancer Research UK.  Cancer Research UK, a registered charity in England and Wales (1089464), Scotland(SC041666) Isle of Man (1003), Jersey (247)

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Cancer Research will benefit from the proceeds of Deborah’s book.Credit: