The road remembers.
And sometimes, it speaks back.
Highway 61 is more than a stretch of pavement cutting through the Mississippi Delta. It is a corridor of memory—a living archive where history, myth, and the unseen travel side by side.
In Hwy 61: Ghost of the Delta, J.M. Alexander gathers a series of atmospheric testimonies drawn from the deep South, where folklore collides with lived experience and the past refuses to stay buried. These are not campfire tales or manufactured scares. They are stories shaped by place—by river water, red clay, crossroads, and the long shadow of history.
Each chapter drifts between the natural and the supernatural, revealing how land remembers trauma, how voices linger after institutions move on, and how truth often survives not in official records, but in story.
This is Southern gothic without spectacle.
Supernatural nonfiction without gimmicks.
A quiet reckoning with what was lost, erased, and still walking beside us.
Read carefully.
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