ga thompson
When death became a business, the living stopped asking questions.In 2027, Dr. Sarah Chen’s team achieved the impossible-bringing a child back from forty-five minutes of clinical death. The world called it a miracle. Within a decade, ResurrectionCorp turned that miracle into industry: the dead returned as perfect workers, tireless and compliant. They weren’t called zombies, of course. 'Zombie' became hate speech. The official term was Returned.But language can’t hold back conscience forever.Marcus Chen, a mid-level supervisor at a resurrection facility, tells himself he’s only keeping the system running. Then one of his units begins to remember who he was-and who he left behind. Across town, seventeen-year-old Sophie Reeves discovers that her father, who filed legal papers forbidding resurrection, has been working in a warehouse for seven years. Her mother signed the consent form. Her father’s memories are being erased.As Sophie searches for him, Marcus begins to see the truth he’s helped conceal. The Returned are waking up. Their memories are returning in fragments-songs, gestures, stories-and what starts as a glitch becomes a movement. A hum rises from the warehouses, a single resonant note that spreads across the nation.ResurrectionCorp calls it malfunction. The government calls it terrorism. The world calls it an economic emergency. But to the Returned, it’s the sound of remembering who they are.Through leaked memos, congressional hearings, and intimate human voices, The Failed Resurrection Economy exposes a future where morality has been automated, grief monetized, and language weaponized. It’s a story of a daughter’s rebellion, a scientist’s guilt, and a man’s reckoning with the system he upheld-until the dead began to sing.Brilliantly merging dystopian realism with moral myth, ga thompson delivers a haunting meditation on consent, memory, and the cost of progress. In the tradition of Le Guin, Butler, and Ishiguro, The Failed Resurrection Economy asks:What happens when the soul becomes intellectual property-and remembers?