There are spoilers ahead for Remember Me and Remember Me 2: The Return.
It’s been three years since Shari Cooper returned to Earth as a Wanderer in the body of Jean Rodriguez. In that time, she’s penned multiple famous novels and is now set to produce her first film adaptation of one of her more popular thrillers, First to Die. Shari knows that her stories are the reason she’s returned. They have the power to help people, but the demands of her career are leading her more and more off track. There are also those who hate Wanderers and try to keep them from their missions, and Shari is about to be tempted by a powerful adversary.
Like the second novel in the trilogy, Remember Me 3 doesn’t come close to the moving simplicity of the original, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t worth reading. Fans of Remember Me will have to adjust their expectations as the books move further into the spiritual. It can hardly be called a ghost story at this point, and characters from the previous novels barely feature in this one, but it’s interesting to see where Shari and Peter’s journey takes them.
I’ve always found it difficult to relate to Shari, even though I like her as a narrator. She’s cooler and sassier than I ever was as a teenager, but now that she’s matured some, I find myself relating to her more, specifically in the things that tempt her. Shari is drawn toward fame and making her mark on the world, even as she knows beyond a doubt that those things don’t matter once she’s dead. She has empirical evidence that most of us are lacking that chasing those ideals of a perfect life don’t have any impact on her spiritual path. I’ve found myself caught up in that mindset before and been knocked down a few pegs, and I feel like it made me more empathetic to Shari even as readers can see her making the wrong choices. Some part of her even knows she is, but that’s the nature of temptation, which is something the novel explores really well.
Plot-wise, it has more going for it than the second book as well. The villain is fairly obvious, as I think he/she is meant to be, but there are still some tense scenes as, in classic Pike fashion, some of the things from Shari’s novel start to come true. I was a little confused by the ending; it seems to run counter to some things that happen earlier in the series (more after the spoiler mark), but I was mostly satisfied with the way it wrapped up. Again, I have the feeling it isn’t necessary to read these to enjoy Remember Me, but they’re not bad for fans of Pike’s more mystical plots.
SPOILERS SPOILERS SPOILERS. TURN BACK BEFORE IT’S TOO LATE.
After the publication of Remember Me within the novel, Shari visits her mother, Mrs. Cooper, to ease the pain the book has rekindled over her death. I found this odd only because we know from the first novel that Mrs. Parish is actually Shari’s birth mother and that Mr. and Mrs. Cooper have stepped in to look after Amanda after this is discovered. That’s not to say Shari doesn’t still think of the woman who raised her as a mother, and vice versa, but I found it strange that she would go to her on her deathbed rather than Mrs. Parish, who always brought Shari more peace when she was alive. It felt a little like an emotional hijack, like the story needed something dramatic to end on, and that was the only option left to explore.
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