Eighteen-year-old Regina McBride is haunted by the ghosts of her
parents. Her father visits her--he is desperate, but she doesn't know
how to help him. Her mother is a quiet figure, obscured by light--a
flash at the foot of the bed. Regina, raised Irish Catholic and with the
ironclad belief that some sins are unforgivable, fears her parents are
trapped between worlds, forever punished after they committed suicide
within a few months of each other.
Terrorized by these visitations and flattened by grief, Regina slowly
begins her hazardous journey to recovery. Lyrical and lovely, harrowing
and haunting, Ghost Songs charts her struggle to separate madness from
imagination and sorrow from devastation. From New York to the desert of
New Mexico to the shores of Ireland, Regina searches for herself, her
home, and a way to return to the family that remains. Ghost Songs is an
exploration of memory, a meditation on love and loss, and, in the end, a
celebration of life and the living.