
n Tales from a 1970's Corpse, Thomas Miller delivers a Southern Gothic nightmare steeped in regret, mortality, and the voices of the forgotten dead.
Meet Charles Nibbit, a man who laughed too hard and lived too fast, only to discover that death is not silence but memory—an endless replay of everything left unsaid. Walk beside Nurse Lila Mayweather, whose sins against her patients bind her to the cold wards of Saint Agatha's Hospital, where shadows crawl across ceilings and whispers slip through the vents. And follow Ricky Dales, a drifter whose overdose should have ended in nothingness—until Lila claimed him for her growing congregation of the damned.
These stories are not about fire-and-brimstone hells or tidy afterlives. Instead, Miller paints death as an echo chamber of unfinished lives, where every broken promise, abandoned child, and unanswered prayer returns to haunt both the dead and the living.
Haunting, visceral, and unforgettable, Tales from a 1970's Corpse is more than a horror collection—it is a confessional of what lingers when the heart stops but the soul refuses to rest.
If you dare to open this book, remember: the dead at Saint Agatha's don't stay quiet. They remember everything.
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