
A novel of memory, mercy, and the horrors we choose to keep.
At the end of a quiet street stands a house that remembers everything.
Not just its own creaking walls or shuttered windows—but the names, griefs, and forgotten truths of those who step inside. Nina is its watcher. Caleb is its witness. Together, they tend the house's ever-shifting halls, offering sanctuary to the lost, the broken, and the haunted. But the house has a memory older than either of them—a buried origin that was never meant to be unearthed.
When a guest arrives with no name and a desire to forget, and a stranger walks through the door with a warning of something coming to erase rather than haunt, Nina and Caleb must decide: will the house remain a refuge of painful truths… or be consumed by the silence it once tried to forget?
Told in lyrical prose and layered with atmosphere, The Last House on Raven Street is a slow-burn psychological horror novel about memory, identity, and the cost of bearing witness. For readers who believe that ghosts are not always dead—and forgetting is sometimes the most dangerous thing of all.
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