A review by janewhitehurst
The Dead I Know by Scot Gardner

3.0

The Dead I Know was well-written, but pretty anti-climactic. The book is narrated from the perspective of Aaron, a teenage boy who has been having terrible nightmares and sleep walking episodes. He doesn't know much about his past, and the reader knows that his nightmares are the link between his loss of memory and what actually happened to him as a child. Unfortunately, when it's all revealed, it's more of a shrug moment than a "holy crap" moment. Not a bad read, but not amazing either.