Kristof A. Mill

Stories that linger in the dark. Weird horror exploring grief, memory, and the absurd.

Scroll
Remembrance by K. A. Mill — book cover showing dark atmospheric horror novel

Remembrance

Status: Editing

After watching his wife die, Jack discovers a horrifying truth: as long as dead are remembered, they can't rest. Instead, they suffer—conscious, aware, trapped in endless agony.

He faces an impossible choice. Erase Ana from existence—every photograph, every memory, every friend... Or let her burn in the torment forever.

How many can you sacrifice to save one soul? And what happens to the man who becomes the only person left who remembers?

Join the Hollow Letter

New fiction, strange recommendations, occasional updates. Delivered only when there's something worth saying.

Short Stories

Pulse

When his brother-in-law arrives at Jack's doorstep, he doesn't expect to be pulled into a drug-fueled, misguided journey through quantum physics to revive his lost wife. But Jack knows what grief means—he'll try anything. Even this.

Status: Pending publication

Travelling Pole

He lost everything—his family, his homeland, his will to live. But no matter how hard he tried, he couldn't lose his life. Understanding the cruel joke of quantum immortality, the travelling Pole played Russian roulette for a living. Hoping for resolution to his suffering, he only dug deeper into misery.

Status: Pending publication

Nothing

When a scientist disheartened by life's failures discovers the sky is disappearing, he feels a spark of passion he thought long dead. Now he's caught between his cynical nature and a desperate hope for meaning.

Status: Pending publication

Follow me on social media

Portrait of K. A. Mill, author of weird horror fiction

About

K. A. Mill writes at the intersection of the eerie and the deeply human—stories where grief becomes reality, memory mutates, and the absurd bites. Currently editing two novels and a collection of short stories that explore the weird and absurd through fringe ideas. His fiction owes debt to the masters of the uncanny: Stanisław Lem, Kurt Vonnegut, and Jorge Luis Borges.