About the Author — Dallas T. Tillman
About the Author

Dallas T.
Tillman

A life forged in the Mississippi heat, shaped by love, loss, and the courage to tell the truth. This is the story of a man who found his voice — and gave others permission to find theirs.

"This book was not written to impress.
It was written to heal."
Dallas T. Tillman — Author
53Years Married
1940Year Born
2020Published
01

Where It
All Began

Before he ever wrote a word, Dallas Tillman was learning lessons in resilience under the Mississippi sun. Born September 13, 1940, in Newman, Mississippi, on the banks of the Big Black River — he came into a world that demanded everything from you and apologized for nothing.

He grew up in Hinds County, farming cotton, corn, and sweet potatoes alongside his mother and brother after their father left. When his diabetic mother fainted in the relentless summer heat, young Dallas and his brother would carry her home on a wagon. By morning, she'd be back out beside them in the fields. That image — a mother rising again, always again — never left him.

The early years built something in Dallas that no school or sermon could replicate: a quiet, unshakeable understanding that hard work is not a punishment, it is an identity. He carried that understanding like a compass throughout his life.

In the 1950s, the family migrated west to California — part of a great tide of Black families seeking new ground. Dallas flourished as a student-athlete in Fairfield, discovering that his body was as capable as his spirit. He grew. He learned. He kept moving forward.

Then came San Francisco. Then came a chance encounter while selling encyclopedias. Then came Marie.

"This book was not written to impress. It was written to heal."

A Letter From Dallas

In his own words — why this story had to be told.

To You, Dear Reader —

For decades, I carried this story inside me like a stone I couldn't put down. People would ask about my life — about Marie, about Mississippi, about how we made it — and I would share pieces of it. But I always knew the full picture deserved more than a conversation. It deserved a page.

I didn't set out to write a memoir because I thought my life was special. I set out because I knew it was real. And in a world full of curated lives and polished narratives, I believed that real — unfiltered, honest, sometimes painful real — was exactly what someone out there needed to read.

Writing this book meant going back. Back to the cotton fields. Back to my mother fainting in the heat and rising again. Back to the exact moment I saw Marie for the first time and knew — the way you only know once in your life — that everything was about to change. Revisiting those memories was not easy. There were chapters that took weeks to get through. Not because I couldn't find the words, but because the words found me first, and I wasn't always ready for them.

But here is what I discovered: the act of writing is the act of forgiving. Forgiving circumstances. Forgiving people. Forgiving yourself. Every page I wrote was a page I no longer had to carry in silence.

Since publishing, readers have reached out with their own stories — stories of migration, of love against the odds, of loss, of starting over. That is when I understood: this was never only my story. It belonged to everyone who ever worked without recognition, loved without guarantee, or kept going when there was every reason to stop.

If you are holding this page right now, something brought you here. I believe that something matters. And I hope that when you finally hold the book in your hands, you feel seen — because you are.

Dallas T. Tillman Author · Newman, Mississippi · California Dreamer · Marie's Husband

A Life Built
Milestone by Milestone

1940
Born in Mississippi
He Believed
That life meant hard work, family loyalty, and making the most of what the earth gave you.
Life Taught
That love is an action, not a feeling — shown in the fields every morning, in the wagon rides home, in rising again before dawn.
Shaped the Memoir
The opening chapters of the book are rooted in this early season — raw, grounding, and essential.
Life Taught
That discipline and perseverance are not burdens — they are the gifts passed down from the people who loved you first.
Shaped the Memoir
The teenage years paint a portrait of becoming — of a young man choosing who he would be under the weight of expectation.
Teen Years
Athlete & Worker
He Believed
That speed on a field and strength in a body could earn you a future your circumstances couldn't otherwise provide.
1950s
California Years
He Believed
That the West held a different kind of promise — wider roads, bigger stages, and a version of himself not yet fully written.
Life Taught
That reinvention is not betrayal. You can carry Mississippi in your heart and still grow tall in California soil.
Shaped the Memoir
The California chapters explore ambition, identity, and what it means to chase a dream without leaving your roots behind.
Life Taught
That real love is not convenient. It challenges everything you thought you knew about timing, logic, and what you deserve.
Shaped the Memoir
Marie is the emotional core of the entire book — every chapter orbits the gravity of who she was and what she meant.
1960s
Meeting Marie
He Believed
That some things in life you don't plan — you simply recognize them when they arrive, and you hold on.
2020
Becoming an Author
He Believed
That the story owed its truth to the page — to Marie's memory, to his mother's sacrifice, to every reader who needed to know it was possible.
Life Taught
That vulnerability is not weakness. Sharing the whole story — the grief, the joy, the regret, the gratitude — is one of the bravest things a person can do.
Shaped the Memoir
The act of writing became its own chapter — a final, living proof that it is never too late to be heard.

The Moment Everything Changed

He was selling encyclopedias door to door in San Francisco — a young man from Mississippi with big shoulders, a bigger smile, and the kind of determination that makes people open their doors even when they hadn't planned to.

Then he met Marie Debose.

She was thirteen years older. She was still married to another man. And by every conventional measure, it was exactly the wrong moment. But Dallas knew. The way you only know once.

He was not deterred by the odds. He had, after all, grown up learning from a woman who fainted in the heat and rose again before morning. Persistence was not a strategy for Dallas — it was simply who he was.

What followed was 53 years and 8 months of a love that defied convention, outlasted every obstacle, and remained — until Marie's passing in 2018 — the defining fact of Dallas Tillman's life. She was his anchor, his inspiration, and ultimately, the reason this book exists.

When Marie passed, Dallas made a promise: her story, their story, would not disappear into silence. He sat down to write — not for fame, not for legacy, but because love like that deserves to be remembered.

Before, During,
and After

Writing a memoir is not just a literary act — it is an emotional journey. Here is how Dallas moved through each stage.

Stage 01
Before Writing
  • Carried memories for decades in silence
  • Unsure if his story was worth telling
  • The grief of losing Marie became the catalyst
  • A quiet conviction that the truth deserved a page
Stage 02
During Writing
  • Confronting decades of pain with honesty
  • Rediscovering joy buried beneath the grief
  • Writing as an act of forgiveness — of self and others
  • Reclaiming his own narrative from the silence
Stage 03
After Publishing
  • Letters from readers who found themselves in the pages
  • Invitations to share the story beyond the book
  • Realizing that vulnerability is what builds connection
  • A renewed sense of faith, purpose, and peace

A Story That
Keeps Giving

"If my story helps one person keep going, then every page was worth it."

— Dallas T. Tillman
★★★★★

"This is a life story in short form. I have seen first-hand the love they had for each other. Proud to say he is my brother and friend. A good book to read."

Nathan Edwards — Dallas's Brother
★★★★★

"A very good life story. Personal and touching. You feel as though you are sitting alongside Dallas and Marie through every chapter of their journey."

Maria C. Palmer — Verified Reviewer
★★★★★

"A beautiful life story — vividly detailed and heartwarming. A wholesome testament to the greatness of people of color living in extraordinary times."

June A. Reynolds — Verified Reader

A Story Waiting
to Meet You

Every great life deserves to be remembered. Dallas Tillman has given his — honestly, fully, and with love on every page. The only question is: when will you begin?