"Vulture Capitalism at Its Absolute Worst"
The Late Shift is a masterclass in urban paranoia. It presents a world that is so weird and unsettling, yet entirely believable because it taps into the one constant we all know: if a corporation could find a way to profit off our corpses, they’d have the paperwork ready before the heart stopped beating. In this story, greed doesn't just win over humanity—it consumes it, digests it, and puts it back to work for minimum wage.
The Plot: No Rest for the Weary
The concept is chillingly simple. Imagine a world where death isn't the end of your labor; it’s just a transition to the graveyard shift—literally.
The "Employees": The pale, mindless clerks working the 3:00 AM shifts at gas stations and convenience stores aren't just tired; they’re reanimated.
The System: Shadowy corporations intercept bodies during that brief window before burial, using "medical intervention" to create a workforce that never complains, never strikes, and never needs a break.
Why the Audiobook Format Excels
This is a short, punchy experience, and the full cast of Fangoria’s Dreadtime Stories makes it incredibly immersive. The sound design—the hum of fluorescent lights, the hollow, repetitive voices of the "late shifters," and the mounting dread in the protagonist’s realization—creates a claustrophobic atmosphere that a simple book might miss.
Final Thoughts: The Netflix Need
Again, I find myself wishing this series was a TV show. Each episode of Dreadtime Stories feels like a "lost" masterpiece that deserves the high-budget, cinematic treatment of a Netflix anthology. The visual of a neon-lit, 1980s convenience store staffed by the "working dead" would be iconic horror imagery.