---
title: Dr. Latrece Wright Shares the Health Scare Behind The Uninvited Pebble
description: Dr. Latrece Wright on the weeks of waiting after a routine mammogram found a solid mass, and the book she wrote so no woman waits alone.
author: Darie Nani (Editor-in-Chief)
date: 2026-07-13T12:29:05.011Z
updated: 2026-07-13T12:29:05.036Z
canonical: https://richbooksmagazine.com/article/latrece-wright-uninvited-pebble-health-scare
image: https://cdn.nanimediahouse.com/latrece-wright-author.webp
categories: Author Journeys
content_type: Spotlight
region: Georgia
publication: The Quantum of Light
about:
  - type: Person
    name: Dr. Latrece Wright
    description: Dr. Latrece Wright is an author, licensed ordained minister and breast cancer advocate from Byron, Peach County, Georgia. She holds a doctorate in divinity and religious studies. Before ministry she modeled in Ebony and Essence showcases, and she has trained across nursing, EMT work, pharmacy and law enforcement; today she drives farm equipment professionally. Her book The Uninvited Pebble recounts the weeks of waiting after a routine mammogram found a solid mass that proved benign, and the faith that carried her through. She also writes love stories, recipe books and children's books.
    jobTitle: Author and Minister
---

Before her doctors could tell her whether the solid mass in her breast was cancer, Dr. Latrece Wright had already decided that she would fight, whatever the answer turned out to be. The answer, when it finally came, was good: the mass was benign, though it still had to be removed through surgery. It is the weeks in between that fill her book, The Uninvited Pebble.

### Book: The Uninvited Pebble
By Dr. Latrece Wright

A true, personal account of a breast cancer scare. During a routine mammogram, a solid mass was found in Dr. Latrece Wright's breast. The book follows the weeks of waiting that came before any answer: the uncertainty, the faith that carried her through them, and the decision she made before any diagnosis, that she would fight whatever the outcome. The mass turned out to be benign, but it still had to be removed through surgery. Written so that women facing an uncertain diagnosis know they are not alone, it is also a plain, heartfelt case for regular checkups and early detection.

[Paperback](https://www.amazon.com/Uninvited-Pebble-Dr-Latrece-Wright/dp/B0GXGSJWZ4)

The health scare began with a routine mammogram near her home in Byron, in Peach County, Georgia. The screening picked up something that needed a closer look, and follow-up tests confirmed a solid mass without being able to say what it was. Latrece, a licensed ordained minister with a doctorate in divinity and religious studies, went home to wait for an answer.

The Uninvited Pebble is her short, deeply personal account of that wait, and of getting through days when nothing is settled. She published it independently in April, and it is only now finding its way to readers.

## Waiting for Biopsy Results After a Mammogram Callback

The book spends little time in the operating room. Most of its pages belong to the wait, the stretch when Latrece knew a mass was there and did not know what it was.

"The hardest part wasn't the surgery — it was sitting with the unknown. They had found a solid mass," she says, "and not knowing whether it was cancer or not was almost impossible to cope with."

A callback after a mammogram is common, and most turn out to be nothing serious. The days between appointments still had to be lived, with the question underneath all of them.

## Faith and Healing During a Health Scare

Her way through was a decision she made early, before any doctor could tell her anything definite.

"I made a decision early on that no matter the outcome," she says, "I would fight and trust that God still had a purpose for my life. I stayed in the Word, kept my faith, and chose to remain hopeful even when I didn't have answers."

That decision is the center of the book. Ministry is Latrece's calling as well as her training, and faith carries the whole account. Readers of spiritual memoirs will recognize the kind of faith she describes: worked at, kept up through stretches when there was nothing new to go on. She has spent years as a minister sitting with other people's fears, and in the book she turns that same patience on her own.

She recovered from the surgery, and then she wrote it all down.

## Who Is Dr. Latrece Wright?

Latrece came to that waiting room with plenty of practice at hard things. She modeled in Ebony and Essence showcases as a young woman, and for Studio 26, Glamour Shots and Dreamquest Images. She trained across nursing, EMT work, pharmacy, sports medicine and law enforcement. Today she works as a professional CDL driver of farm equipment in Peach County.

She is a member of the Eastern Star and the Atlanta DeKalb National Association of Professional Women, and she mentors and tutors in her community. The Uninvited Pebble sits inside a wider writing life: she also writes love stories, recipe books and children's books.

## Inspirational True Stories for Women Facing a Health Scare

Latrece says the book exists for one reader above all: the woman who has just been called back.

"I wrote this book because I wanted anyone facing an uncertain diagnosis to know they are not alone — my goal was to offer comfort, hope, and inspiration to others going through something similar."

It is written for women facing health scares, for faith-based readers, and for anyone drawn to inspirational true stories. The book is short, which suits the reader it is meant for: a woman waiting on results rarely has the concentration for a long one.

When it appeared in April there was no launch of any kind. She made the book available and carried on driving, mentoring and tutoring.

## Why Regular Mammograms and Early Detection Matter

Dr. Wright also works as a breast cancer advocate, and her story doubles as a case for the routine screening that started it. The mammogram that found her mass was a scheduled checkup. Because the mass was found early, her doctors had time to test it properly and remove it on a planned schedule.

In her advocacy work she urges women to keep those appointments, because a mammogram can find a mass long before anything can be felt. And for the ones already waiting on results, she wrote The Uninvited Pebble to sit with them until the answer comes.

**About Dr. Latrece Wright**
Author and Minister

Dr. Latrece Wright is an author, licensed ordained minister and breast cancer advocate from Byron, Peach County, Georgia. She holds a doctorate in divinity and religious studies. Before ministry she modeled in Ebony and Essence showcases, and she has trained across nursing, EMT work, pharmacy and law enforcement; today she drives farm equipment professionally. Her book The Uninvited Pebble recounts the weeks of waiting after a routine mammogram found a solid mass that proved benign, and the faith that carried her through. She also writes love stories, recipe books and children's books.

## FAQ

**Q: Does a mammogram callback mean you have cancer?**
No. Callbacks are common, and fewer than one in ten women called back after a screening mammogram are found to have cancer. Latrece's callback led to further tests and eventually to good news, though the wait in between is the experience The Uninvited Pebble describes.

**Q: Can a benign breast lump still need surgery?**
Yes. Doctors may recommend removing a benign mass if it is solid, growing, causing discomfort or difficult to fully characterize. That was Latrece's experience: her mass was confirmed benign, but it still had to be removed through surgery.

**Q: How do you cope with the anxiety of waiting for biopsy results?**
Doctors commonly suggest keeping your routine, leaning on a support person and staying physically active. Latrece's answer in The Uninvited Pebble is faith: she decided on her response before the results came, stayed in scripture and held onto hope through the days without news.

**Q: Who should read The Uninvited Pebble?**
Women facing a health scare or an uncertain diagnosis, faith-based readers, and anyone who values true personal stories. It is short and deeply personal, written to be a companion through the waiting rather than a medical guide.
