They
say if you want to really find a good book, go to page 69 (the middle
and meat of the book) and you like what's there, it's definitely worth
reading the whole book. For today's feature, I'm zooming in on page 69
of Marie McGaha's memoir, Your Ghost: A Memoir of Love, Loss and the Echoes That Remain.
BOOK DESCRIPTION

Your Ghost: A Memoir of Love, Loss and the Echoes That Remain
is a searing, faith-anchored memoir of love, loss, and the long road
back to oneself. When Marie’s husband dies without warning, her world
fractures in an instant, leaving her to navigate the brutal, unfiltered
landscape of grief. In the quiet of an empty house and the chaos of a
shattered heart, she wrestles with God, memory, and the haunting
presence of the man she can no longer touch but cannot let go.
Told with unflinching honesty and spiritual depth, Your Ghost
traces the intimate, day-by-day unraveling and rebuilding of a woman
who refuses to let tragedy define the rest of her life. As she confronts
guilt, loneliness, anger, and the strange moments when his nearness
feels almost tangible, Marie discovers that grief is not a straight line
but a sacred, winding path. What emerges is a story not only of
devastation, but of resilience—a testament to enduring love, stubborn
hope, and the quiet miracles that carry us forward when we think we
cannot take another step.
╰┈➤Book Details
- Genre: Memoir
- Sub-genre: Survival Biographies
- Language:English
- Pages: 105
- Hardcover: 979-8252998060
Your Ghost is available at Amazon.
╰┈➤Here’s What Readers Have To Say!
“You
will feel every emotion, especially the pain, of losing your soulmate
unexpectedly as you read this deeply spiritual journey of recovery. This
kind of loss is painful, emotionally draining and physically crippling.
Through every stage of grief, Ms. McGaha helps us understand how we can
begin to breathe again and move forward. I cried, I felt her pain and
rejoiced as the agony slowly began to leave. The best book I’ve ever
read about grief and recovery. A must read for anyone experiencing the
loss of a loved one. Also, it’s proof God is still beside us at our
lowest point… (this is) a woman trying to hang onto life. A life that
crashed and burned unexpectedly… very inspiring.” – Vicki L.
“A beautifully written, heart-wrenching examination of deep-held grief, Marie
McGaha pulls the reader in with her dynamic and impactful imagery,
compelling us to understand her tragedy—the caregiving and ultimate loss
of the one love of her life, her husband, Nathan. The thoughts, the
analysis, and the unfolding of this unwanted, unasked-for journey from a
woman familiar with grief are, at times, more than one can bear. Yet
the sheer poetry, interwoven with the Word of God, brings us fully into
the author’s world with brilliance. Her deeply personal exploration of
grief—from exhaustion, to numbness, to heightened awareness—is
extraordinary, leaving the reader with a greater understanding of our
own journeys through death and loss. This is a journey that, once
entered, will not easily be forgotten—a powerful and necessary read for
anyone who has known love and loss.” – Linda W.

I don’t remember a life without pain because the only time the pain eased was when he was here.
When he died, every old wound returned with interest.
The grief didn’t just hit the moment he took his last breath — it reached backward into every part of my life — the girl who learned to survive, the woman who carried too much, the years before I
knew safety, the wounds that were never tended. Nathan didn’t erase those wounds. He held them with me. He made them lighter. And when he died, the pain came back like a flood.
Sometimes the grief hits like a crashing wave, sudden and violent. Other times it pulls me under slowly, like an undertow. And then I feel like I’m floating on the surface, waiting to see which will come next.
The calm between storms isn’t peace — it’s exhaustion.
It’s the moment after the scream has emptied itself, after the tears have burned through, when my body has nothing left to give.
It’s the gap between realizing this is how I live now and realizing I can’t change any of it.
It’s resignation, not because I don’t care, but because I cared so deeply that the loss broke something inside me that hasn’t had a chance to mend.
What do you think? Would you keep reading?

Marie McGaha
is an award-winning writer whose work includes clean historical
romances, Christian devotionals, and heartfelt children’s books. A
storyteller at her core, she weaves faith, resilience, and gentle humor
through every page she writes.
She makes her home in southeast
Oklahoma, in the foothills of the Ouachita Mountains, where life is
anything but quiet. Her days are shared with four spoiled dogs, a
crippled rooster with more attitude than feathers, a noisy guinea who
believes it runs the place, a couple of flighty hens, and a watchful roo
who keeps an eye on everything that moves. This lively little
farm—equal parts sanctuary and circus—provides endless inspiration,
companionship, and the kind of grounding only God’s creation can offer.
Whether she’s crafting a tender love
story, guiding readers through Scripture, or bringing the Bible to life
for children through animal characters, Marie writes with a voice shaped
by faith, loss, healing, and the stubborn hope that refuses to let go.
Her work reflects the heart of a woman who has walked through fire and
come out carrying stories worth telling.
You can also join her for daily devotionals on YouTube at @HeReignsChurch, where she shares encouragement, Scripture, and the steady reminder that hope is still alive. You can contact her by email: church.hereigns@gmail.com.
Marie’s latest book is Your Ghost: A Memoir of Love, Loss and the Echoes That Remain.
Visit her blog at authormariemcgaha.blogspot.com.
Connect with her on social media at:
╰┈➤ Facebook: www.facebook.com/AuthorMarieMcGaha
╰┈➤ LinkedIn: Linkedin.com/in/mariemcgaha
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