
“I didn’t really feel I had a book to write until I stood on the distant shore and looked back over the ripples my life has made-on myself and on others,” Randy Travis says.

It will be available in hardcover, Kindle, and audio forms, and was co-written by Ken Abraham, who has also worked on memoirs for Buzz Aldrin, Jimmy Wayne, and others. On May 14th, Randy Travis will release his long-awaited memoir called Forever and Ever, Amen: A Memoir of Music, Faith, and Braving The Storms of Life through publisher Thomas Nelson, which is a division of HarperCollins. But friends and family of Travis say he still has a steel trap of a mind, and though he may not sing as much as he once did, he can still write.


Country music legend and Hall of Famer Randy Travis suffered a life-altering bout of viral cardiomyopathy in 2013 that led to a massive stroke and brain surgery, leaving him unable to speak and sing like he did when he was amassing 18 #1 hits and selling over 25 million records.
