DisclaimerThis book is a work of speculative fiction. Any characters, events, or details are products of the author's imagination and are not intended to represent real persons, living or dead, or actual events. While this story may reference real scientific concepts or figures for thematic or narrative purposes, it should not be taken as factual biography, scientific explanation, or historical document.This novel contains scenes, ideas, and descriptions that may be disturbing or intense for some readers. It includes elements of psychological horror, speculative science, and supernatural themes that are not grounded in actual scientific practice and should be understood as fictional constructs.The reader is advised that the following content may contain:• Suggested depictions of psychological stress and mental transformation• References to human anatomy for narrative effect• Intellectually unsettling scenarios beyond ordinary reality• Fictionalized interpretations of scientific investigation and consciousnessBy proceeding, you acknowledge that you understand this is a work of speculative fiction and agree that the author and publisher are not liable for any interpretation outside of this context.In the rain-drenched village of Kurozawa, an ancient Japanese yokai legend refuses to stay buried. The Ubume Curse: Ghost Mother The Crushing Handover is a gripping speculative horror novel that reimagines the terrifying Ubume—the ghost mother who appears on stormy nights, cradling a bundled infant and pleading with strangers to "e;hold my baby… just for a moment."e; What begins as an act of compassion quickly becomes a nightmare: the bundle grows impossibly heavy, crushing bones, pulping organs, and dragging victims into an eternal handover of grief.When unemployed welder Kenji Nakamura stumbles upon the woman in white on a flooded riverbank, he takes the bundle—and becomes the first in a chain of devastating handovers. His pregnant wife Aiko is left shattered, haunted by visions and a sinister weight growing inside her. As the curse spreads, Detective Haruto Sato investigates the impossible "e;accidents"e; only to find himself next in line. His wife Mika, also expecting, soon experiences bleeding walls, echoing childbirth screams, and cravings that blur the line between life and death. Stone Jizō statues weep blood, shadowy birds with infant faces hunt the unwilling, and the river itself whispers forgotten names.Blending Edo-period folklore from 1782 with a modern-day psychological descent, author Vishvākālātāmi Raksha delivers a visceral tale of inherited grief, maternal horror, and the crushing weight of guilt. From blood-soaked kimonos and midnight hospital deliveries to ancient shrine rituals and the final, soul-shattering confrontation, the story explores what happens when a mother's denied love becomes a weapon that no one can refuse. The curse doesn't need acceptance—it feeds on compassion, refusal, and every unspoken failure of parenthood.Atmospheric, relentless, and intellectually unsettling, this novel captures the suffocating dread of rainy nights, the terror of pregnancy transformed, and the horror of holding on when every instinct screams to let go. Fans of Japanese horror classics, supernatural folklore, and slow-burn psychological terror will be riveted by its blend of yokai legend and raw human emotion. Will the cycle of handovers ever end, or will the Ubume's plea claim yet another generation under the next rainy night