
To Die For
To Die For is a quiet, uncanny contemporary fantasy about John Rosehill, a man the world barely notices who finds a living book of necromancy in a municipal archive. The book doesn’t teach him to raise the dead—it teaches him to listen, to accompany, to rearrange the living’s relationship to absence. With salt, sugar, three coins, and a handful of soft syllables, John becomes a bridge: naming landings where stairs need to pause, gentling locks for rooms that grieve, overlaying true names on stone, and defending the right of rivers and people to linger. Each episode follows a small, precise mercy—helping a sister correct her mother’s grave, giving a family time on a porch before a sale, quieting a nursery’s lingering lullaby, opening the unbuilt room behind a wall where prices and returns are kept fair. As John’s work deepens, the book exacts its cost: the little things slip away—his laugh’s shape, the taste of cinnamon, the sound of his mother’s spoon. He trades them for a ledger of kindnesses and the mathematics of mercy, learning when to open, when to lock, and when refusal is the gentlest spell. Tender, eerie, and practical, To Die For is about the ethics of care, the ritual of everyday objects, and the way we carry our dead without possessing them. It’s a story of thresholds—doorframes, bridges, landings—and the people who keep them honest.
Disclaimer: This show may contain expletives, strong language, and mature content for adult listeners, including sexually explicit content and themes of violence. This is a work of fiction and any resemblance to real persons, businesses, places or events is coincidental. This show is not intended to offend or defame any individual, entity, caste, community, race, religion or to denigrate any institution or person, living or dead. Listener's discretion is advised.Less

