RSS

Author Archives: The Crazymad Writer

Unknown's avatar

About The Crazymad Writer

FREE EBOOKS FOR ALL, that's what I say, FREE EBOOKS FOR ALL, courtesy of ME, The Crazymad Writer. Stories for children and young at heart adults. And remember, my eBooks are FREE FREE FREE!

The Machine in Brussels

The Machine in Brussels

“The Machine in Brussels”
—A Dark Verse of Control and Decay

They built a throne on shifting sand,
With waxen laws and sleight of hand.
A beast with flags and polished teeth,
That feeds on dreams and rot beneath.

Twelve stars above, a crown of lies,
They smile while severing ancient ties.
The sovereign voice, a muted ghost,
Replaced by men who wine and toast.

They do not bleed, they do not feel,
They crush with pens, and sign the seal.
A thousand rules, a million chains,
To bind the soul, to strip the veins.

A single farm, a faceless plan,
No room for soil, nor flesh, nor man.
Just paperwork, and fines, and speech —
And truth forever out of reach.

The tongue is taxed, the thoughts observed,
The edges of the map are curved.
The fish are counted, dreams controlled,
And liberty is bought and sold.

They do not lead, they do not serve,
They circle like a flock of birds —
All pecking at what once was whole,
Until there’s nothing left but scroll.

The lands grow quiet, culture thins,
The old ways buried in their bins.
They speak of peace with velvet voice,
While robbing nations of their choice.

This is the pact, the poisoned trade,
The flag beneath which truth is flayed.
And if you dare to step aside —
Expect the storm, the smear, the slide.

So burn the blue and gold away,
And raise the banners of dismay.
For freedom, though a fragile spark,
Still glows within the growing dark.

 

Tags: , , , , , ,

How I Learned to Love the Bananas

How I Learned to Love the Bananas

“Ode to the Glorious EU (or How I Learned to Love the Bananas)”
by The Crazymad Poet of Ballybureaucracy

Oh hail to thee, O Brussels great,
Where minds convene to legislate
On crucial things — like how to weigh
A cucumber in a solemn way.

The noble minds with golden pens
Who argue lunch for twelve till ten.
They ponder hard, debate, and stress —
Then outlaw slightly crooked cress.

Thou tower of paperwork divine!
Thy memos stretch from Rhine to Tyne.
Your forms require three pens, a prayer,
A notarised strand of your hair.

You ruled with wisdom, calm and sage,
To standardise the hamster cage.
And what great minds did then agree?
To banish jugs that hold more tea.

Let Britain beg, let France protest,
Let Italy wear garlic vests!
Still forth you march in fine attire —
With rules on how to light a fire.

Thou master of the sausage war!
You settled that — and so much more:
“Thou shalt not call it cheese, ye goat,
If from a cow or southern moat.”

Oh, sing of subsidies so grand —
A field of stones in promised land!
And butter mountains, milk lakes too,
Enough to drown a small canoe.

We thank thee for thy wise decree
On metric shrimp and brie-to-be.
We toast with wine (with tax applied)
Your parking fines EU-wide.

So raise the flag, the stars, the blue,
For all the pointless things you do!
And may you rule with gentle blight —
And never, ever, get things right.

EU out happiness in

 
 

Tags: , , ,

Alice on Top of the World

Alice on Top of the World

Chapter One
Into the Abyss

It was many years later when Alice found herself on another adventure—though, to her surprise, she was once again a child, no older than when she first tumbled into Wonderland and slipped through that curious Looking Glass.

“How curious,” she whispered, trying to recall the girl she had once been.

Suddenly, the White Rabbit appeared before her, looking impatient. “Took your time getting here,” he quipped.

“I beg your pardon?” Alice replied, recalling how rude he could be—particularly when he felt so inclined.

“I said you took your time. You should have been here fourteen years ago,” he huffed indignantly, hopping briskly away.

“But,” Alice stuttered, running after him, “I have no idea how I arrived, let alone why I’m so late!”

“We accept no ifs or buts here—by now, you should know that,” the Rabbit said, as a door suddenly materialized beside him. Without hesitation, he pushed it open. “Hurry up—please don’t dawdle.”

Alice hurried through the doorway, struggling to keep pace with the rapid-hopping Rabbit. She wondered if he’d got out of bed on the wrong side that morning, for he seemed quite grumpy on such a lovely day. The sun shone brightly, warming everything around them.

“I wonder where I might be,” she mused, admiring the pink forget-me-nots that lined a winding path before her. “Am I in Wonderland?” she asked, just as another door—similar to the first—appeared.

The Rabbit gave her a peculiar look. “Of course we’re not in Wonderland,” he said, opening the door with a flourish. “We’re on top of the world.” Then, with a wink, he scurried down another winding path, bordered by more pink forget-me-nots.

“The top of the world?” Alice gasped, surprised. “That’s impossible!”

The Rabbit stopped and turned to face her. “Then how can you be here if it’s impossible?”

Alice hesitated, flummoxed by his question. The only reply she managed was, “I bet you’re mad!”

“Mad? Oh, that all depends,” the Rabbit said, with a sly grin. “Depends on whether you mean mad or mad.”

“That’s silly,” Alice insisted. “They both mean the same thing.”

“Not quite,” replied the Rabbit, his eyes gleaming. “If you’re mad number one—and someone calls you mad number two—you might just be very mad indeed about such a fundamental mistake.”

“I’m not mad!” Alice declared, stamping her foot in frustration. She changed the subject, noticing another door had appeared. “Look—another door. Shall I try opening it?”

The White Rabbit reached for the handle, but the door stubbornly refused to budge.

“May I try?” Alice asked, feeling quite un-mad.

Standing back, the Rabbit said nothing. Instead, his tiny, beady eyes watched her intently.

Alice grasped the handle and pushed. The door swung open easily, revealing a dark, yawning hole. She stepped through without hesitation and tumbled into a vast, gaping abyss.

“No, I don’t want to go back up there—no matter how tempting the top of the world might be,” she muttered, staring at the tiny speck of light far above her. “It’s much too far!”

Before she could grasp what was happening, something passed her by in the darkness—she couldn’t see what, only hear its rushing sound. Clinging tightly, she rode it out of the well.

Surprisingly, she found herself on the back of a baby hippopotamus, its skin as smooth as silk. She wondered how she’d managed to stay on long enough to escape that shadowy place. But before she could think further, she slipped and slid off the hippopotamus, landing heavily on the dusty ground.

“I don’t like this place,” she moaned. “I don’t like it at all.”

“You don’t like it?” squawked the baby hippopotamus, its voice high-pitched and surprisingly cheerful for such a hefty creature. “How do you think I feel? There’s not a drop of water in sight—none! And we hippos need water—lots of it!”

Alice brushed dust off her dress and nodded politely. “Mr. Hippopotamus, thank you for the ride—truly the most comfortable hippopotamus ride I’ve ever had.” (Though she omitted to mention she’d never actually ridden one before.) “Thank you again.”

“My dear child,” he replied, “you’re so light I hardly felt you at all. Feel free to jump on my back anytime I pass by, if you need another ride out of that dark place.”

“Thank you,” Alice said with a smile. “I’ll keep that in mind—and treasure your kind offer.”

With that, the hippopotamus sank back into the darkness, searching for water. But before he could begin, another soft landing echoed nearby—though it was nowhere near as gentle as Alice’s.

Before she could say “Jack Robinson,” the White Rabbit reappeared—this time riding backwards on the baby hippopotamus’s back, heading toward the bright light ahead.

He scolded Alice for falling down the hole, then paused. “If there’s going to be any hole-falling around here, we’ll need a vote—decide who’s first and who’s second,” he declared. Alice nodded, though she suspected he might be quite mad—or maybe both.

Suddenly, a new winding path appeared before them. But this one was different—less inviting. Instead of pink forget-me-nots, enormous, green aspidistras with snapping beaks awaited, their mouths wide and hungry.

“Come on, Alice,” urged the Rabbit, rushing past the threatening plants. “We need to get to the top of the world!”

Alice gasped as the first aspidistra snatched at his thick fur, tearing a large wad from his back. “We must return to the top of the world,” he insisted, seemingly unbothered by the danger.

Not wanting to admit she was a little frightened of the strange, snapping plants—and not eager to ask for help—Alice prepared to step down that perilous path.

But the Rabbit was already far ahead. Alice hesitated, closing her eyes and taking a tentative step. She hoped—just hoped—to catch up with him before the plants could reach her.

No sooner had she begun than one of the beaks lunged for her left ear, another yanked her hair, and a third tried to nip her nose.

“Stop that!” Alice shouted. “Stop it this instant, or I’ll dig you all up and replant you with rhubarb!”

The beaks froze midattack, and Alice inspected her head. Everything was intact. She heaved a sigh of relief.

“Thank you,” she said. “I can’t imagine what’s gotten into you—plants aren’t supposed to be terrible, awful things.”

As she gazed at the towering, beak-mouthed plants, she thought she heard a faint cry. “Who’s crying?” she asked.

Despite listening carefully, she heard no reply—only the swaying of the plants’ stalks. Then they began to shake, their beak mouths moving high above her.

“Stop that,” Alice commanded. “Tell me—who’s crying?”

One of the plants, swaying more than the others, began to speak. “She’s crying,” it said softly, “the little offshoot near my wife—see?” A long, leafy arm pointed across to the right.

“Your wife?” Alice asked in surprise. “Plants can get married?”

“Yes,” the plant replied, swaying gently. “Can you see them?”

“I might, if you’d stop swaying,” Alice said, feeling a little dizzy. “You’re making me feel sick.”

“I can’t help it,” the plant admitted. “When we’re upset, we sway. It’s our way of expressing how we feel—like when the wind blows through us, and we don’t like it.”

“Oh, I’m sorry,” Alice said kindly. “Is there anything I can do to help?”

“You could promise not to dig us up,” the plant whispered, voice trembling.

“Of course I won’t,” Alice promised, “not after how rudely I was treated. I only said that because I was frightened.”

The plants stopped swaying, allowing Alice to see the tiny aspidistra nestled under its mother’s broad leaves. Without fear, she moved closer, reaching out to the little one.

“I’m truly sorry,” she said softly. “If I upset you, please forgive me.”

“Yes,” the baby plant replied, trying not to sob. “And we’re sorry for frightening you. We’re just so hungry… normally we’re happy, with smiling beaks to greet travelers.”

Confused, Alice asked, “Hungry? How can you be hungry when your roots find all the food you need?”

“Fertilizer,” the mother explained. “All plants need it at some point. But none of us have had any for ages. I’ve never even seen it!”

“This is terrible,” Alice muttered, scratching her head. “I’ll find you some—enough to feed you all.”

The beaks seemed to smile—if they could—and began chattering excitedly about the fertilizer mine. Alice listened as they described a place she’d never seen, where the precious stuff was stored.

“Where is this mine?” she asked.

“I’m sorry,” the mother admitted. “We don’t know exactly. But we believe it exists.”

Determined to help, Alice promised, “I’ll find you fertilizer. I’ll make sure you have enough to grow strong and happy.”

CONTD

a new alice in wonderland story

 

Tags: , , , ,

Old Dublin Town

Old Dublin Town

Old Dublin Town

Old Dublin, ah, the tales you hold,
In cobbled lanes and hearts grown old.
Your whispers echo down the quay,
From Ha’penny Bridge to old Dalkey.

Gaslamps flicker in evening mist,
Where lovers once walked hand-in-wrist.
Horse-drawn carts on Grafton rumbled,
As street cries through the morning tumbled.

The Liffey flows through time and song,
Past Liberty’s echoes, proud and strong.
Where Molly Malone, in statue still,
Pushes her cart near Stephen’s hill.

A pint in hand at dusk’s fair call,
In snug old pubs with timbered wall.
The fiddle weeps, the bodhrán pounds,
In smoky air where joy abounds.

Tall tenements with washing lines,
Where children played in simpler times.
The echo of a skipping rope,
And dreams strung up with threadbare hope.

The chatter of the markets’ din,
Moore Street calls, a cheeky grin.
With apples, tales, and Dublin wit,
Where every stall was truth and skit.

A poet’s breath, a rebel’s fire,
A city’s soul that won’t retire.
Though times have changed and roads are new,
Old Dublin’s heart beats strong and true.

So raise a glass and tip your cap,
To all who walked your winding map.
Old Dublin, dear, you still enthrall—
The fairest city of them all.

dublin in the rare old times
 
 

Tags: , , , ,

Sunbury on Thames 1960s

Sunbury on Thames 1960s

Sunbury, Sweet Sunbury (1960s Dream)
by the banks of the Thames, where the willows lean low…

In Sunbury town, where the river would gleam,
And boys kicked balls on the village green,
The milk came clinking at quarter to eight,
And neighbours would nod through each white garden gate.

The sixties had come with its twist and its shout,
But in Sunbury, life just pottered about—
With the butcher, the baker, the shop on the bend,
And children who vanished till teatime’s end.

We rode our bikes with streamers and pride,
Past hedges and hedgerows, arms open wide,
The gasworks still rumbled, the pylons stood tall,
And the ice cream man chimed down the lane by the wall.

The corner shop smelled of mint and of dust,
Of licorice strings and halfpenny trust.
The Thames flowed lazy, in no frantic race,
Just meandering softly past place after place.

Sunday meant roast, and a flickering telly—
With Dixon or Steptoe or old Albert Kelly.
We dreamed of space rockets, of mods in the city,
Yet Sunbury stayed still, and stubbornly pretty.

Schooldays were chalkboards and ink on the shirt,
Of beetles in jars and knees caked in dirt.
Teachers with slippers, and slipperier rules,
And mums in their curlers outside of the schools.

The smell of the river, the hum of the train,
The fog on the towpath, the patter of rain.
A town in a pocket of time now long passed,
Yet the memory of Sunbury seems always to last.

So here’s to the town where the boathouses doze,
Where willow trees whisper old secrets they know.
Though decades may pass and the world rearrange,
Dear Sunbury’s soul—may it never quite change.

sunbury on thames 1960s
 
Leave a comment

Posted by on July 28, 2025 in sunbury on thames

 

Tags: , , , ,

Owerri 1977-1978

Owerri 1977-1978

The Lines We Laid in Owerri
by Gerrard Wilson

I worked in Owerri, back in the day,
Where red dust danced in the heat of the clay,
And the palms would sway in a lazy trance,
While we gave the wires their chance to dance.

With spanners and schematics in greasy hands,
We dreamt of dial tones crossing lands.
Through humming cabinets, cables tight,
We built a world from voice and light.

The market buzzed with morning cheer,
Plantains sizzled, and goats drew near.
Children waved as we passed each street,
And shouted “Oyibo!” with stomping feet.

The exchange room echoed like a cave,
A hum, a beep, a tone so brave.
We tuned and tested, firm yet kind,
Chasing ghosts down copper line.

At night we drank by lantern light,
Tales of home and signal might.
Mosquitoes hummed a backing beat,
As frogs declared the rain’s repeat.

We patched the world with loops and wire,
Laced every call with quiet fire.
No fame, no fanfare, yet still we knew,
That something grand was breaking through.

Owerri’s air, so warm, so wide—
Still hums inside me, deep with pride.
A voice, once silent, spoke so clear—
Because we passed the signal near.

 

Tags: , , ,

The Ballykillduff Banger

The Ballykillduff Banger

The Ballykillduff Banger (A Mad Poem)

In Ballykillduff where the hedgehogs roam,
Lived Jimmy McGroggan in a bathtub home.
With a mind like a blender on setting “explode,”
He built a wild car that defied every code.

He cobbled it up from a lawnmower’s spleen,
A toaster, a tricycle, parts of a bean.
The wheels were all different—one square, one round,
One came from a pram that he found on the ground.

The steering was made from a bent frying pan,
The horn was just Jimmy yelling, “OUTTA ME VAN!”
It ran on potatoes, or tea bags, or jam,
And made noises like sneezing a whole Christmas ham.

It backfired at priests and startled the sheep,
It clattered and clanged like a robot with sleep.
It once outran lightning, then stalled at a bog,
And reversed on its own into Mrs. McGog.

The windscreen was glass from an oven that died,
The passenger seat was a toilet with pride.
He raced through the village, past bins and the nuns,
Screaming, “I’VE INVENTED THE FUTURE—WITH BUNS!”

The guards tried to stop him with road spikes and nets,
But he flew through the air yelling, “NO REGRETS!”
He landed in cabbage, still puffing with glee,
Shouting, “SHE FLIES LIKE A TRACTOR IN ECSTASY!”

Now tourists all visit to worship the wreck,
Which smokes once a week and pecks like a peck.
It’s parked by the pub, with a plaque in fine brass:
This banger was faster than gas, horse, or lass!

So raise up your spanners and sing, if you dare,
Of Jimmy McGroggan and his wheeled nightmare.
For though it made chaos, and startled ten cows—
It’s the pride of Ballykillduff even now.

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on July 23, 2025 in ballykillduff, banger, car

 

Tags: , , , ,

A collection of cosmic horror

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on July 23, 2025 in cosmic horror, Horror

 

Tags: , ,

A dark and terrifying tale of alien horror

A dark and terrifying tale of alien horror

The Ballykillduff Incident


Ballykillduff was a quiet place. Nothing much ever happened there, unless you counted old Mrs. Dunne’s cow getting stuck in the bog every other Tuesday, or the time young Declan swore blind he saw a banshee combing her hair by the churchyard wall (it turned out to be his granny in a nightie, sleepwalking).

But that changed one moonless night, when the stars vanished.

Not behind clouds—no, they simply blinked out, one by one, like someone was snuffing candles in the sky.

Then came the humming. Low, deep, and wrong. It rattled windowpanes, stirred glasses off shelves, and made the dogs howl until their throats gave out. At precisely 2:06 AM, the power failed. Phones died. Radios hissed static. The whole village went dark—except for the bog.

A light rose from it. Not a flickering will-o’-the-wisp or the distant glow of a torch—this was blue-white, searing, pulsing like a heartbeat. People peered from windows, too scared to speak, as something… vast… emerged.

It wasn’t a ship like you’d see in films. No saucers or flashing lights. It looked like a cathedral made of bones and glass, covered in thorns that dripped black ichor. It hovered a few feet above the bog, and beneath it, the earth boiled.

Then they came.

Tall as lamp posts. Skin like rotting velvet. Faces like melted candles with too many eyes. They didn’t walk so much as glide, legs twitching like dying spiders. And worst of all, they smiled—wide, toothless grins that split their heads open like a zipper.

Father Malloy was the first to go. He stumbled out of the rectory, clutching his rosary and shouting prayers in Latin. One of the creatures tilted its head and whispered something that made his body turn inside out without spilling a drop of blood.

The creatures moved street to street, house to house, marking doors with something thick and red that steamed. Those marked were never seen again. Sometimes you’d hear a scream, cut off mid-breath. Sometimes just a long, wet chewing sound.

By morning, the light was gone. The ship too. And so were forty-seven people.

The rest of the village was untouched. Untouched, but changed. The survivors don’t speak of that night. They’ve boarded up their windows with iron crosses. They won’t leave their homes after dark. And no one goes near the bog anymore.

But if you’re foolish enough to visit Ballykillduff on a moonless night, you might hear the humming.

And if you hear the humming, it’s already too late.

 

Tags: , , ,

Aliens Landed…

Aliens Landed…

**The Night the Aliens Landed in Ballykillduff**

It was a dark and stormy night—well, in Ballykillduff it’s always a bit dark and damp, but that’s beside the point. On this fateful evening, just when you thought the small town couldn’t get any quirkier, aliens decided it was their time to shine… or, more accurately, their time to land and hide. Yes, you heard that right! Aliens landed, and I really don’t kid!

Now, Ballykillduff isn’t exactly known for being a hub of extraterrestrial activity. In fact, most folks there had never seen anything more exciting than Mrs. O’Leary’s cat stuck in a tree. But on this particular night, the usual sounds of distant sheep bleating and the odd rustle of leaves were interrupted by a strange humming sound—like a swarm of bees that had taken up jazz music. Little did the residents know that behind those hedges, cloaked in darkness, intergalactic visitors were trying to figure out where the heck they ended up.

The aliens themselves were quite the sight to behold. Picture this: they were about three feet tall, with heads so big they could audition for a role in a poorly made horror film. Their skin glowed a faint green, not because they were sickly, but because someone must have overdone it with the glow-in-the-dark paint during their travels. They wore silver suits that looked suspiciously like something you’d find at a discount Halloween store, complete with oversized ray guns that looked like they were made from tinfoil and old soda cans.

Now, while the aliens may have expected to land somewhere more glamorous—like New York City or perhaps descending onto a gathering of scientists—they found themselves in the middle of Ballykillduff’s main square, right next to the statue of famed local hero, Old Man McGregor, who famously discovered the town’s “mystical potato”—those are its claims to fame, folks!

After checking their intergalactic map, one of the aliens, who called himself Blorp, said in his best (and rather wobbly) English, “I think we’ve made a wrong turn at Jupiter.” Meanwhile, his partner, Zog, was busy taking selfies with Old Man McGregor’s statue, insisting that this ‘potato’ was perhaps the revered leader they’d come to find.

As the night wore on, the aliens decided that hiding might be the best course of action until they could figure things out. So, what did they do? They hopped into the nearest bushes, and if you think that was a good idea, you clearly haven’t seen a Baltic Hedge in person. It’s a wonder they didn’t end up attracting local wildlife—or worse, Mrs. O’Leary’s cat again.

The next day, news spread across Ballykillduff like wildfire being fanned by the wind. “Aliens landed!” shouted Bert, the town crier, waving his bell around with the enthusiasm of a child who just scored a goal in football. The townsfolk gathered at the pub, clinking their pints and debating how to best welcome these cosmic travelers. Some suggested a 5K run to greet them, while Mrs. MacGinty recommended a potluck dinner. Because nothing says “welcome to Earth” like colcannon and bread pudding.

Meanwhile, back in the bushes, Blorp and Zog were oblivious to the brewing excitement. They had decided to put on their best camouflaging skills and hoped to remain incognito, despite glowing like neon signs in a blackout. They spent their time arguing over whether it was appropriate to use their ray guns to zap the pesky flies that kept buzzing around them. Spoiler alert: they absolutely shouldn’t have.

After a few hours of endless bickering, an adventurous group of kids from Ballykillduff decided to venture into the nearby garden, eyes wide with the thrill of discovery. The little ones stumbled upon the aliens, fully convinced they were either new pets or exceptionally hideous fairies. “Can we keep them?” asked a particularly bold lad named Tommy, whose idea of fun involved poking anything that moved with a stick.

The aliens, seeing no escape, finally decided to reveal themselves. Talk about a dramatic reveal! They leapt out of the bushes, hands raised (not in surrender, mind you, but more like they were performing a poorly choreographed dance). “Greetings, Earthlings!” yelled Blorp, only for Zog to remind him, “No yelling! We don’t want to scare them!”

The kids squealed with delight, thinking it was all part of some brilliant prank. “You’re not real!” said Sarah, the skeptical one in the group. “You look like something from a bad sci-fi movie!”

And they did. With their tacky outfits and awkward stances, one might say the aliens were more comedy than cosmos. Before long, other curious townsfolk began to gather, drawn by the loud laughter and the bizarre sight of dancing aliens and bewildered children.

As the adults arrived, Blorp quickly introduced himself and Zog, attempting to explain their presence. Hours later, after much confusion, misunderstanding, and a lot of snorts from the crowd, the aliens were invited to join the potluck dinner. Everyone figured, “Why not? They can’t be worse company than Aunt Maureen with her mystery meat casserole!”

As the stars twinkled above Ballykillduff, the event turned into an unexpected block party. The aliens shared tales of distant planets while the townsfolk entertained them with versions of local folklore. Zog even tried a pint of Guinness, promptly gasping and exclaiming, “What kind of potion is this, and where can I get more?”

By morning, the aliens became honorary citizens of Ballykillduff. They were given a warm send-off with handmade “Wish You Were Here” postcards crafted by the kids, featuring sketches of them flying away in their tinfoil saucer.

And just like that, with a rattle and a hum, Blorp and Zog took off into the stars, leaving behind a tale that would forever be etched in the history of Ballykillduff. The townsfolk still chuckle about that wild night—their very own close encounter of the unusual kind. Because really, who could have guessed aliens would choose Ballykillduff for a visit?

So, remember, next time you hear a strange noise outside your window or see a glowing figure in the dark, it might not be just your imagination playing tricks. Just maybe, the aliens have landed again… and they’re probably hiding in the hedges!

 

Tags: , , ,