Daniel has everything that should be enough.
A stable relationship. An ordinary life. Days that pass without visible disruption.
Then the dreams begin.
Not nightmares.
Not visions.
But conversations.
In his dreams, someone listens to him. Someone who does not judge, does not command, does not push.
Someone who knows exactly what to say.
As Daniel begins to confuse what he hears at night with what he thinks while awake, his reality starts to fracture. Certainties thin out. Silences grow heavier than words.
Julia notices too late.
Afterward, only one question remains-one no one can fully explain:
how dangerous can a voice be that knows you better than you know yourself?
Daniel's Last Dream is an intense and unsettling psychological novel about the fragile boundary between influence and choice, love and guilt, listening and manipulation.
A story that is not about monsters, but about cracks-
and what can emerge when someone learns how to enter them.