There are two possible outcomes when the human spirit is exaggerated to the point of devastation. One is that it can break into dust; the other is that it can change into something frightful and indestructible. Remember, Remember is not just a story of survival. It is a story of what happens when survival is no longer enough.

Deanne Wallace had been many things before that night—confident, accomplished, and loved. She had built a life filled with warmth, with dreams, and with the simple joys of everyday existence. She had never known what it was to be truly powerless.
Until Guy Fawkes Night! Until the fire in the sky became a cruel joke, mocking her as she was dragged into the abyss.
For days after the attack, she drifted between reality and nothingness, her body a map of bruises, her soul a gaping void. The pain wasn’t just in the cuts, the broken bones, the raw flesh—it was in the silence, in the way people looked at her with pity, in the way the world continued to turn as if nothing had happened. The nightmares wouldn’t stop. The touch of his hands, the way his breath had smelled like cigarettes and something rotten—it replayed over and over in her head, taunting her and keeping her awake.
She could have disappeared. She could have let the horror consume her, let the fear steal her voice forever.
But Deanne Wallace was not done. The moment she opened her eyes in that hospital bed, staring up at the sterile lights, she knew she needed to do something to change her story. She knew that she was going to hunt him down.
She made the decision to give him the same feelings she had. She was not finished yet. She was going to make him feel the pain, sorrow, and torture she had endured in the woods. The same Guy Fawkes Night, when individuals are supposed to have fun and joy, will become a night of confrontation when she will face her attacker head-on.
But fear had a strange way of mutating into something else. It became rage. It became purpose.
She had spent her life believing in fairness, in-laws, in a system that protected the innocent. But now she understood—monsters didn’t fear laws. Monsters didn’t stop because someone told them to. Monsters had to be taught to be afraid.
And so she became something else.
Her body healed, but her mind sharpened. She learned, she watched, and she prepared. The woman who had walked into those woods had died that night, but the one who rose from the ashes?
She was unstoppable. Will she make it to the last?
This isn’t just a revenge story. “Remember, Remember” is a reckoning that will keep you glued to your seats. It is a book that will leave you breathless, shocked, and in a state of horror, that will leave you questioning the right and the wrong.
If you’ve ever wondered how far you would go to reclaim what was taken from you, this book will leave your blood cold. It will drag you through the darkest pits of human depravity and force you to ask: When justice fails, what would you do to reclaim your life?
Would you let the fire die? Or would you hunt the hunter and seek revenge?
Whatever the reason, reading this book will be a treat for you.
Remember, Remember is not just a tale of revenge. It is a compelling exploration of the human capacity for resilience. With complex characters, thought-provoking themes, a chilling plot, and many twists and turns, Grant presents an amazing story—to consider how far one would go for justice and whether the pursuit of revenge can ever bring true healing. This novel will appeal to anyone who enjoys psychological thrillers with complex, morally ambiguous characters and a plot that keeps you guessing until the end.
Get your copy on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0D9TWH7H3.