Atif khurshaid
Bio
Welcome to my corner of the web, where I share concise summaries of thought-provoking articles, captivating books, and timeless stories. Find summaries of articles, books, and stories that resonate with you
Stories (72)
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Mira Collins wasn’t superstitious, but she was broke—and fascinated by secondhand tech. She found the listing late one night: a near-mint, high-performance laptop for less than a third of its usual price. The seller insisted on meeting in person and only accepted cash. His name wasn’t listed. Just a message: “Don’t use it after midnight.”
By Atif khurshaid5 months ago in Horror
The Quiet Room
Emily and Dan Morgan moved into the old Victorian house on a whim. It was a steal, really. Everyone told them the same thing: “It’s too cheap to be true.” But the realtor had smiled tightly and offered vague reassurances. "Old houses just want to feel lived in again," she’d said.
By Atif khurshaid5 months ago in Horror
The Last Letter from Aleppo
The nights in the camp were cold, not because of winter, but because of absence. Yaseen, twelve years old, sat by the torn window of the shelter, wrapping himself in a fading shawl that used to smell like his mother. Now, it smelled like dust and silence.
By Atif khurshaid6 months ago in Families
From the Valleys of Peshawar to the Land of the Rising Sun
My Story: My name is Atif, and I was born on May 15, 2002, in Peshawar, Pakistan, into a poor but hardworking family. Our origins trace back to the Mohmand Agency (FATA), but we’ve been living in Peshawar for over 38 years—fighting poverty, chasing dreams, and building our lives one brick at a time.
By Atif khurshaid6 months ago in Psyche
Whispers in the Fog
Eli Porter had only meant to visit Grey Hollow for a weekend. He was a travel blogger, always on the hunt for forgotten towns with stories to tell. But Grey Hollow wasn’t just forgotten—it had been erased. No phone signal, no Wi-Fi, and the last known article about it was dated 1964. That was the hook.
By Atif khurshaid6 months ago in Horror
The Fifth Key
Dr. Sara Nadeem never believed in ghosts—until the day she received a letter from herself. She was alone in her laboratory at 11:57 PM, sipping cold coffee, buried in simulations on molecular time symmetry. Her research—considered fringe by some and foolish by most—suggested that certain isotopes could retain temporal "imprints," like echoes of events before they happened.
By Atif khurshaid6 months ago in Horror
Twice in the Blast
In the summer of 1945, as World War II neared its devastating climax, a 29-year-old Japanese engineer named Tsutomu Yamaguchi boarded a train from his hometown of Nagasaki to Hiroshima. Employed by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, he was sent on a three-month business trip to help design a new oil tanker. The city of Hiroshima was still untouched by war, a bustling industrial hub nestled among green hills and quiet rivers.
By Atif khurshaid6 months ago in History
The Long Road Home
Tom Riley left Dalton, Texas when he was twenty-three with nothing but a guitar, a dream, and a whole lot of anger. Back then, he was convinced the world owed him something. His father — a hard man who believed in calloused hands and silence over sentiment — didn’t try to stop him. He just said, “If you’re going, go. But don’t come back unless you’re ready to stay.”
By Atif khurshaid7 months ago in Families
Whispers in the Mirror
June and Jennifer Gibbons were born in 1963, identical in every visible way. Children of Barbadian immigrants in a white-dominated town, they already stood out. But it was their behavior—eerie, synchronized, and almost unnatural—that caught everyone's eye.
By Atif khurshaid7 months ago in Horror











