Not the Version You Remember - A Quiet Psychological Novel
When Elise returns to the small town she left behind, she expects awkward reunions and half-forgotten faces. Instead, she finds people watching her with a softness she can't explain - as if she's survived something she can't recall. They speak about a boy who died when she was eight, a tragedy everyone seems to remember vividly... except her.
But Elise's body remembers things her mind refuses to:
a forest path she shouldn't know,
the metallic hum of an abandoned substation,
the feeling of a small hand slipping from hers,
the sharp grief of a clearing she can't place.
The more she tries to understand her past, the more fractured it becomes.
Everyone has a version of the story.
None of them fit.
None of them feel like hers.
As the fragments begin to align - sensations, echoes, wrong-familiar faces - Elise is forced to confront the memory her mind buried to keep her safe. The truth waiting for her is not violent or sensational, but quietly devastating: the kind of truth a child could not carry, and an adult cannot ignore.
Not the Version You Remember is a haunting, emotionally resonant psychological novel about memory, survivor guilt, and the stories a community tells when the truth is too heavy to hold. Perfect for readers who love slow-burning, aftermath-driven fiction in the vein of Celeste Ng, Torey Hayden, and the quiet unease of Shirley Jackson.