Some secrets are buried. Hers was built. After a devastating breakup and a burnout that nearly destroyed her, Aria does what anyone would do - she runs. A new apartment. A new suburb. A fresh start in the quiet, picture-perfect town of Oakhaven. But Oakhaven isn't the sanctuary she hoped for. A music box she never packed appears in her kitchen. A barista calls her by a dead woman's name. Her journal fills with warnings she doesn't remember writing. She wakes up in places she's never been, wearing mud on shoes she swears she left by the door. Her phone buzzes with texts she never sent. And her reflection - her own face in the mirror - looks like someone else is staring back. Aria tells herself it's stress. Trauma. Sleep deprivation. Her therapist agrees, handing her a bottle of pills and a reassuring smile. But the pills don't stop the dreams. Every night, the same girl appears - a girl with Aria's face, Aria's voice, Aria's scream. She's running. She's terrified. And she's trying to tell Aria something. When a mysterious neighbor whispers four words that shatter everything she thought she knew - "You aren't who you think you are" - Aria is dragged into a nightmare far worse than madness. Because the truth about who she is, what happened the night she "left" her ex-fianc , and why everyone in Oakhaven seems to recognize her face isn't just unsettling. It's unthinkable. The Girl Who Forgot Herself is a white-knuckle psychological thriller that will make you question the nature of identity, memory, and what it truly means to be human. With a twist you won't see coming and a heroine who refuses to stay broken, this is a novel you'll start at midnight and finish by dawn. She came to Oakhaven to find herself. What she found was far more terrifying.
ThriftBooks sells millions of used books at the lowest everyday prices. We personally assess every book's quality and offer rare, out-of-print treasures. We deliver the joy of reading in recyclable packaging with free standard shipping on US orders over $20. ThriftBooks.com. Read more. Spend less.