Description
Two unsettling psychological thrillers where memory fractures, observation turns dangerous, and reality begins shifting at the edges.
In Forty-Eight Hours, a disgraced transit investigator wakes inside his car with no memory of the previous two days—only forty-seven unanswered calls to a disconnected number and warnings recorded in his own voice. Beneath the abandoned tunnels of Platform Nine, something is still waiting for him to remember.
In The Good Neighbor, a woman becomes obsessed with the strange sounds coming from the apartment next door, documenting every movement in a black notebook—until the entries begin changing on their own.
For readers who love slow-burn dread, unreliable narrators, and psychological tension that lingers long after the final page.