Horror Mystery Remember Me is a Fantasy/Horror book series written by American author Christopher Pike.
During Big Beth's party they play with a crystal and they are convinced Peter is talking to them.
Shari finds out that her boyfriend cheated on her, and goes out onto the balcony to get some fresh air, and the next thing she knows she is waking up in her own bed.
She goes downstairs to have breakfast with her family, but she can't pull the chair out and her parents and her brother Jim are ignoring her.
The only thing Shari Cooper can remember is falling off her friend's balcony during the party.
Carol is in love with Darlene, whose boyfriend, Sporty, recently died by being shot.
He died in Lenny's arms, and after the party they have a meeting to plan revenge against Sporty's murderer, Juan.
She calls him Jimmy and offers to help him move out of his parents' house as long as he would give her a ride back home.
Jean gets a phone call from Carol that Darlene and Lenny are staging their revenge, and they have a gun.
The next chapter shows Rishi agreeing to let Peter as well as Shari come back as a wanderer, but The Rishi warns Peter that when he killed himself, he nearly survived and that had he lived he would have been crippled the rest of his days, and that if he comes back as a wanderer, he would be in a wheelchair.
The epilogue tells us that Shari in swinging her right arm up pushes away from the balcony and lets her land in the pool below.
They are monsters that will do anything to stop Shari from publishing the truth, even if that means making her fall for one of them, Roger, as a trap.
Peter finally starts to walk, and Shari goes to visit her actual mother; when she gets tucked in, she closes her eyes...
[6] Not long after Shari's passing, Jim concludes a visit with Peter, and feels a tap on his shoulder despite being alone in his home.
Guessing what's going on, Jim sits down at his computer and begins to write Shari's final story.
[7] Publishers Weekly commented that "[Remember Me]'s central mystery, though somewhat contrived, moves along briskly.
Plenty of action combined with several creepy seance scenes keep the pages turning...some may question the prudence of presenting young readers with such a seductive vision of life after death.