Auntie Beulah Freewell spent her life correcting everybody, whether they asked for it or not. She had an opinion for every room, a rule for every problem, and a talent for turning concern into command. But death does not quiet Beulah. Heaven sends her back as a ghost, and nobody is more offended by that arrangement than she is. Now Beulah is stuck haunting the family she loved, exhausted, corrected, and controlled.
Nadine, her Black niece, is trying not to become the same kind of woman. Caleb, Nadine's white husband, has spent years quietly enduring Beulah's suspicion. Their children are caught between grief, humor, family secrets, and one very opinionated ghost who still thinks she should be in charge. When an old cedar chest reveals letters, a baby blanket, and the hidden story of Ruthie Gray, Beulah's unfinished business becomes painfully clear.
She was not sent back to fix everyone else. She was sent back to learn the difference between love and control, truth and shame, service and ownership. Funny, faith-rooted, emotional, and painfully human, Unfinished Business is a story about family, forgiveness, hard truth, and the unwanted lessons that finally teach us who God meant us to become.
Auntie Beulah Freewell spent her life correcting everybody, whether they asked for it or not. She had an opinion for every room, a rule for every problem, and a talent for turning concern into command. But death does not quiet Beulah. Heaven sends her back as a ghost, and nobody is more offended by that arrangement than she is. Now Beulah is stuck haunting the family she loved, exhausted, corrected, and controlled.
Nadine, her Black niece, is trying not to become the same kind of woman. Caleb, Nadine's white husband, has spent years quietly enduring Beulah's suspicion. Their children are caught between grief, humor, family secrets, and one very opinionated ghost who still thinks she should be in charge. When an old cedar chest reveals letters, a baby blanket, and the hidden story of Ruthie Gray, Beulah's unfinished business becomes painfully clear.
She was not sent back to fix everyone else. She was sent back to learn the difference between love and control, truth and shame, service and ownership. Funny, faith-rooted, emotional, and painfully human, Unfinished Business is a story about family, forgiveness, hard truth, and the unwanted lessons that finally teach us who God meant us to become.