Final Countdown to Book Release
Excerpt from Forgiveness Found In Darkness, Ruth Krook: A Life Redeemed
Thank You for Carrying This Story Forward
I want to pause and say thank you.
The presale for Forgiveness Found in Darkness has reached its first milestone—More than 50 copies sold—and I’m genuinely overwhelmed in the most meaningful way.
This book began as a promise made long before I ever imagined writing it. It carries the life story of my great-grandmother Ruth, a woman who endured abandonment, loss, and hardship, yet chose faith, forgiveness, and love anyway.
Each presale order isn’t just a number to me—it’s a signal that Ruth’s voice is finally being heard.
Thank you for your encouragement, your messages, your curiosity, and your trust. Thank you for believing in this story and in the importance of remembering lives that might otherwise fade from history.
I carry this gratitude with me as I continue toward the book’s release. And I know Ruth would be deeply humbled to know her story is being welcomed into so many hands.
With heartfelt thanks,
Chandra 🤍
“In the Lord’s Prayer, Jesus teaches, ‘Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors.’ Though Ruth did not fully understand how this worked, she was determined to follow Christ’s teachings as faithfully as she could, believing that obedience to them was what led to her healing.”
Ruth Krook had every reason not to forgive.
And yet—she forgave.
Some truths were withheld from Ruth for years.
Some answers came too late.
Some losses were never explained.
And yet—she forgave.
Not because the pain was small.
Not because the wrongs were explained.
But because she believed forgiveness was the only path that did not lead her deeper into darkness.
Forgiveness Found in Darkness: Ruth Krook, A Life Redeemed is not a story that minimizes suffering. It is a story that asks what becomes possible when forgiveness is chosen anyway—again and again—without guarantees, without closure, and without conditions.
📖 Official release: March 20
This is a story about faith that survives devastation.
About healing that does not erase the past.
And about forgiveness—not as denial, but as redemption.



