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The Last Thing I Remember Spiral-Bound |

Andrew Klavan

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Charlie West just woke up in someone else's nightmare.

High schooler Charlie West just woke up in a nightmare.

He’s strapped to a chair. He’s covered in blood and bruises. He hurts all over. And a strange voice outside the door just ordered his death.

Charlie West is a good kid. The last thing he can remember, he was a normal high-school student doing normal things—working on his homework, practicing karate, daydreaming of becoming an air force pilot, writing a pretty girl’s number on his hand. How long ago was that? And more to the point . . . How is he going to get out of this room alive?

By calling on his deepest reserves of strength and focus, Charlie manages a desperate escape . . . only to find out that this nightmare isn't ending. There's a whole year of his life that he can't remember—a year in which he was convicted of murdering his best friend and working with terrorists.

Now, with the police hunting him and a band of killers on his trail, he's got to find the answers to some of the deepest questions there are: Who am I? What do I stand for? And how am I going to stay alive?

From Edgar Award winning and bestselling author Andrew Klavan comes the first installment of The Homelanders series.

  • Exciting young adult suspense novel
  • Approximately 82,000 words
  • Part of the Homelanders series
    • Book 1: The Last Thing I Remember
    • Book 2: The Long Way Home
    • Book 3: The Truth of the Matter
    • Book 4: The Final Hour
Publisher: HarperCollins
Original Binding: Paperback
Pages: 352 pages
ISBN-10: 1595545867
Item Weight: 0.7 lbs
Dimensions: 5.4 x 0.9 x 8.5 inches

Andrew Klavan is an award-winning writer, screenwriter, and media commentator. An internationally bestselling novelist and two-time Edgar Award-winner, Klavan is also a contributing editor to City Journal, the magazine of the Manhattan Institute, and the host of a popular podcast on DailyWire.com, The Andrew Klavan Show. His essays and op-eds on politics, religion, movies, and literature have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, the Washington Post, the LA Times, and elsewhere.