

The story ends on a bit of a cliff-hanger, and while not bad, it just didn't quite hit the spot for me. Locked away for a crime she's supposed to commit, Logan needs to find a way to help her and atone for a past he's ashamed of. What does it mean? Callie's birthday is the next day, and when she receives her future memory, it's not so great. They haven't spoken for years, but seeing her fills him with hope. His is decidedly good, showing him winning a swim race, but the inclusion of Callie in that vision - a friend who he's long let slip, but has never quite left his mind - fills him with doubt. We meet Logan on his 17th birthday, the day when everyone receives their future memory. The Forget Tomorrow series is best enjoyed in order.Ĭoming into this as a reader who has no knowledge of the world, I found this novella intriguing, but not quite satisfying. Now, Logan must decide if he'll give up his future as a gold-star swimmer and rescue the literal girl of his dreams. According to the law, she must be imprisoned, even though she's done nothing wrong. She’s received an atypical memory, one where she commits a crime in the future. Logan’s not sure what the memory means, but soon enough, he learns that his old friend Callie is in trouble. He sees himself achieving his greatest wish of becoming a gold-star swimmer, but strangely enough, the vision also shows him locking eyes with a girl from his past, Callie Stone, and experiencing an overwhelming sense of love and belonging.

In a world where all seventeen-year-olds receive a memory from their future selves, Logan Russell's vision is exactly as he expects-and exactly not. Prequel to the New York Times bestselling novel, Forget Tomorrow.
