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Some instructions are not meant to be questioned.
 

Moritz enrols at Instituto Guerrera as a way to steady himself, hoping routine might quiet what his own mind won't — even as certain experiences begin to feel uncomfortably real. He perceives the world too vividly: sounds bleed into colour, sensations arrive layered and overwhelming, and structure feels like the only way to keep those perceptions in check. The school functions exactly as expected — smooth, contained, quietly effective — its routines already proven, its confidence unquestioned.
 

Lola is already part of that rhythm — open, funny, and disarmingly at ease. She knows how to keep a room moving, how to make boundaries feel generous rather than restrictive, how to let things warm without letting them burn.

But beneath that calm continuity, something begins to slip. Details don't align. Incidents are reframed. Experiences Moritz is certain of — seen, felt, embodied — are questioned, softened, then quietly denied. Fires flare in his perception, sharp and convincing, only to be later treated as if they never existed at all. The more he insists on what his senses tell him, the more unstable he appears.

As concern replaces urgency and explanations replace evidence, responsibility starts to shift. The institution remains intact. The rules hold. And the danger is quietly reassigned to the person who can't adapt.

Imperative Ember is the second novel in the False Friends series — a psychological thriller about obedience, perception, and the carefully managed heat of systems that decide what is real. Inspired by real people and a real school, it explores how easily reassurance becomes compliance — and how difficult it is to tell the difference, especially when the cost of being believed keeps rising.

 

Imperative Ember

Rating is 4.5 out of five stars based on 4 reviews
SKU: 9629362000063
€10.99Price
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    Reviews

    Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars.
    Based on 4 reviews
    4 reviews

    • Emily R.Feb 16
      Rated 4 out of 5 stars.
      Care as Correction

      This book understands how control often arrives wrapped in concern. Moritz isn’t punished for what he notices, he’s calmly redirected until his certainty erodes. The prose never rushes, letting doubt build sentence by sentence. As the second instalment, it changes perspective in a way that deepens the unease instead of resolving it. Quiet, precise, and unsettling.

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    • Diego MFeb 15
      Rated 5 out of 5 stars.
      Reassurance as a Weapon

      A psychological thriller about obedience disguised as care. Moritz’s senses (sound into colour, overload, structure as survival) make every scene feel too close. Lola’s ease is the perfect cover. Second in the series, and the continuation is selective in a way that works.

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    • Priya S.Feb 15
      Rated 5 out of 5 stars.
      Lola’s Warmth, Guerrera’s Cold

      Lola keeps boundaries feeling generous, and that’s exactly why it’s chilling. The book turns reassurance into compliance without ever turning cartoonish. Second book in a series; it’s more student-led, but the teacher-focus idea still hums underneath.

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    • Tom WerningFeb 15
      Rated 4 out of 5 stars.
      A system that never breaks

      What stuck with me: the rules always hold, the institution stays calm, and the danger gets reassigned to the person who can’t “adapt.” It’s Book 2, and the shift toward the student viewpoint adds pressure instead of relief

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