The Next Best Book Club discussion

Between I and I: A quiet war between the selves we hide — and the voice that stays to witness.
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message 1: by Vivian (new)

Vivian Morris | 1 comments Rellim Aglo✨ A Novel That Whispers Where Others Shout ✨

Between I and I isn’t just a story. It’s an experience — a quiet unraveling of the selves we hide and the voice that never stops watching.

Thomas Elai Grayson appears ordinary: a library worker who knows how to vanish in plain sight. But inside him live three voices — Adam, Martha, and The Shadow — each born from fear, silence, and survival. When Iris, the only person who ever truly saw him, disappears, the fragile balance inside Thomas begins to shift.

This is not a tale of madness. It’s a raw exploration of:

Childhood wounds that never healed — only buried themselves deeper.

Shame, silence, and the unbearable weight of being unseen.

The voices we carry — the ones that protect, distort, and sometimes save us.

Told in fragments, whispers, and unsent messages, Between I and I is a book that doesn’t drag you forward — it lets you in. And once you’re inside, you may find echoes of yourself in Thomas’s silence, his fears, and his fragile hope to simply remain.

💭 If you’ve ever felt unseen… if you’ve ever carried a voice you couldn’t name… this book will meet you there.

📖 187 pages | Kindle Edition
⭐ 4.75 from early readers

Don’t just read this story. Witness it.
And when it lingers, as all quiet stories do, consider leaving your voice behind in a review — so it can find the next reader still searching for theirs.


message 2: by Dave (new)

Dave Dubois | 1 comments Following the author — anyone who can write a description this powerful probably has much more to share


message 3: by Dina (new)

Dina Block | 1 comments Honestly, I’m already haunted by Iris vanishing and I haven’t even opened the book yet


message 4: by Helen (new)

Helen Wilcox | 1 comments The idea that the scariest part of your past might be what you never dared to feel… I’ve never heard it put that way before. Brilliant


message 5: by James (new)

James Brown | 1 comments That line about guilt that doesn’t scream but stays behind your eyes… chills. I think I’ve felt that before


message 6: by Peter (new)

Peter Rivero | 1 comments I’m always cautious with books about trauma, but the tone here feels safe. Like the author isn’t exploiting pain, just exploring it


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