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Author Archives: The Crazymad Writer

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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!

Aliens Landed in Ballykillduff

Aliens Landed in Ballykillduff

Aliens Landed in Ballykillduff
By Gerrard Wilson (with a touch of cosmic mischief)

They landed one night in a field of rough stuff,
By the boggy back lanes of Ballykillduff.
Their saucer was spinning, all silver and green,
And lit up the cow shed like no one had seen!

Auld Paddy O’Toole, with his flask full of tea,
Was out walking Biddy (his prize-winning ewe, you see).
He stared at the lights, then exclaimed with a cough,
“By Jaysus and Mary—would ye turn that thing off?!”

The hatch hissed open, a ramp clanked down slow,
Out shuffled a creature all covered in glow.
It had three long fingers and seventeen eyes—
But wore wellies and said, “What a glorious sunrise!”

They tried to milk tractors, they fed stones to sheep,
And one kissed a donkey then fell fast asleep.
The postman near fainted when one tried to sing—
“Your radio’s broken!” it said, doing a fling.

They asked for our leader. We offered them Breda,
Who runs the wee shop and makes a fine feeder.
She gave them some Taytos, a carton of milk,
And a scarf she had knitted from Martian-spun silk.

The aliens danced at the Bally Hall ceilidh,
They jived and they jigged and they floated quite gaily.
Then they packed up their bits in a shimmering puff—
And vanished once more from Ballykillduff.

Now no one believes us (as is often the case),
Though we’ve three melted sheep and a crop circle face.
But Paddy swears true, as he finishes his snuff:
“The best craic I’ve seen—was in Ballykillduff.”

 

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The Architects; A Dark Poem About the WEF

The Architects;  A Dark Poem About the WEF

The Architects
A Dark Poem About the WEF

They gather in shadows where mountains breathe frost,
In rooms full of mirrors where truth can get lost.
They speak without blinking, with ice in their veins,
Of futures rebuilt from our rubble and chains.

They wear smiles of silicon, eyes like machines,
Mapping our thoughts on invisible screens.
With whispers of “progress” and “equity” bright—
They tighten the grip with a smile and a light.

A voice from the stage says, “This is the way—
You’ll rent out your soul and be happy one day.”
The screens flash with slogans, sleek, sanitized lies,
While out in the streets, the real freedom dies.

They sold us a virus, then sold us the cure,
Then patented silence to help us endure.
They printed the money, erased all the debt—
But we pay in breath, in time, in regret.

A climate of crisis, perpetual war,
So they can unlock one more digital door.
Behind it: a ledger, a carbon-bound score,
That tells them how much you should eat, own, adore.

And the children are watching on VR-fed screens,
Learning to kneel to algorithmic dreams.
The past has been scrubbed, the present’s a lie,
And tomorrow is coded by suits in the sky.

So sleep if you must, and believe what they say—
But the Architects plan as we wither away.
The world is a board, and we are the pawns—
The Great Game continues long after we’re gone.

The WEF

 
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Posted by on July 20, 2025 in wef

 

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The Great Confusion (A Pandemic Poem)

The Great Confusion (A Pandemic Poem)

The Great Confusion (A Pandemic Poem)
**************************************************

They said, “Stay home, save lives,” we obeyed the call,
While queues stretched long by the pharmacy wall.
Toilet rolls vanished in blink of an eye,
And elbows replaced handshakes—oh my!

They masked us up, they shut down the schools,
They moved the goalposts, they made up new rules.
“Just two more weeks,” they promised with flair—
But months turned to years, with fear in the air.

Some cried, “A scam!” while others just cried,
Some lost their jobs, and some simply died.
Zoom calls replaced all our day-to-day chats,
And dogs were bewildered by all the new pats.

The news came daily, grim graphs on display,
While pundits and experts would chatter away.
Was it all planned? Or chaos and fright?
Was truth just a ghost that fled out of sight?

Needles were offered with gifts and with threats,
With stickers, and doughnuts, and deep, deep regrets.
Some shouted “freedom!” with signs held up high,
While others just stayed in, and wondered why.

Now looking back, with hindsight so clear,
We laugh and we sigh—and shed a small tear.
Was it a scam? Was it just fate?
The world went mad in twenty-twenty-eight.

No answers are simple, no black and no white,
Just foggy grey days and long sleepless nights.
But one thing is certain, one thing is true:
We all lived through it… me, them, and you.

 
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Posted by on July 20, 2025 in confusion, pandemic, scam

 

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Peg and the Missing Sock

Peg and the Missing Sock

Peg and the Missing Sock

On the edge of a sleepy village nestled between rolling green hills, there lived a clever border collie named Peg. With a black and white coat as neat as a checkerboard and eyes that sparkled with mischief, Peg wasn’t just any dog—she was the queen of the household, the boss of the back garden, and the undisputed ruler of laundry day.

Every morning, Peg would sit faithfully by the back door, watching the world wake up. She knew the routine by heart: kettle on, toast in, socks missing. Without fail, every day began with a sock gone rogue.

One breezy Wednesday, the mystery deepened. “I put them both in the basket,” Dad muttered, holding up a lonely blue sock. “I’m sure I did.”

Peg tilted her head. Did you, though?

With a happy bark, Peg sprang into action. She darted past the washing machine, through the flap in the door, and into the garden like a furry bullet. Tail high, nose twitching, she sniffed the air. Something smelt of cotton and adventure.

Under the rose bush—nothing. Behind the shed—just an old tennis ball. Then, finally, near the compost bin, Peg stopped. She pawed gently at the ground… and there it was. The blue sock, slightly muddy but otherwise unharmed.

Triumphantly, Peg trotted back into the kitchen and dropped the sock at Dad’s feet. He stared. “Peg, you little genius!” he laughed, rubbing her ears.

Peg gave a smug little wag. Of course she found it. She always found it. She was Peg the Sock Seeker, the Great Sniffer, the garden’s noble protector.

And the next day, when the left sock mysteriously disappeared again, Peg just gave them all a look that said: Don’t worry. I’ve got this.


 
 

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I used to install telephone exchanges

I used to install telephone exchanges

“The Song of the Telephone Exchange”

In days of wires and copper bright,
When voices flew through day and night,
A noble task, with wrench and gauge—
To build the great exchange!

With reels of cable, thick and long,
The engineers all sang their song,
“Connect the towns! Let speech be free!
From Ballymore to Battersea!”

They hauled the frames with silent care,
In basements dark or towers fair,
Each switchboard stood like organ pipes,
Conducting calls and hums and gripes.

The linemen climbed with spools and grace,
To thread the wires from place to place,
While office clerks with anxious tone,
Said, “When can I call Margate home?”

Through junction boxes, line by line,
The spark of talk began to shine,
And distant cousins, once estranged,
Were mended by exchange!

The clicking clack of relays fast,
The hum of signal, hiss of past,
And somewhere deep within the coils—
The sound of gossip, deals, and spoils.

A marvel born of sweat and steam,
Of teamwork, vision, pipe, and dream,
So raise a cheer for that fine age—
The birth of the exchange!

For every ring, and every tone,
Was built by hands, not done alone.
And though the future’s wireless made—
Their legacy won’t fade.

 

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Alice in Christmasland

Alice in Christmasland

Alice in Christmasland

***********************Alice in Christmasland
It was Christmas Eve, and Alice sat by the window, watching snowflakes perform polite pirouettes across the garden. The fire crackled, the pudding steamed, and a particularly opinionated robin kept telling the sparrows off for singing off-key.
“I do wish something odd would happen,” Alice sighed. “Christmas is all very well, but it’s ever so… ordinary this year.”
No sooner had she spoken than she heard a tremendous jingling, clinking, clanking sort of noise behind the fireplace. The stockings rustled, the clock hiccupped, and out popped — not Father Christmas — but the White Rabbit, wearing a woolly scarf and snow boots far too big for his paws.
“Late! Late for the Yuletide Fate!” he cried. “Oh, Alice, do come at once! We’ve got gingerbread hedgehogs, flamingo carol-singing, and the Queen of Hearts is threatening to cancel Christmas pudding unless she gets a jigsaw puzzle!”
“How very curious,” said Alice, who never missed a chance for curious things. And before you could say “sugarplum snail,” she followed the Rabbit into the fireplace, which had conveniently turned into a shimmering tunnel of icicles and cinnamon.
Chapter One: A Most Peculiar Sleigh
Alice landed with a puff in a land made entirely of gingerbread snow. A sleigh drawn by candy-cane reindeer awaited her, with a grumpy Dormouse at the reins.
“Hop in, or hop off,” he muttered. “We’re on a schedule tighter than a nutcracker’s knees.”
They zoomed past tinsel trees, snowmen sipping tea, and a crocodile chorus singing Jingle Bells in Latin. At the edge of the Sugarplum Swamp, the sleigh skidded to a halt.
“Out you go!” barked the Dormouse, and Alice tumbled into a forest where every tree was decorating itself — some with candles, some with upside-down socks, and one with an alarming number of alarm clocks.
Chapter Two: The Queen’s Very Unmerry Christmas
Alice arrived at the Royal Ice Palace just as the Queen of Hearts was shouting at a snowman.
“Off with his carrot!” she bellowed. “It’s crooked!”
“Please, Your Iciness,” Alice curtsied, slipping slightly on the ice. “I’ve come to help with Christmas.”
“Help?” said the Queen, sniffing her peppermint sceptre. “Then solve this jigsaw puzzle or there shall be no mince pies for anyone!”
The puzzle was shaped like a rabbit, but the pieces kept hopping away.
“Come back at once!” Alice cried, chasing a particularly smug piece under the sofa.
The Mad Hatter appeared from a snowglobe and offered his advice: “Try tickling them. Puzzle pieces hate being tickled.”
Alice tickled the rogue pieces until they giggled and shuffled obediently into place.
“Hurrah!” cried the Hatter. “Now we may eat until we are festively full!”
Chapter Three: The Feast of Fanciful Things
The banquet was held on a table that danced in slow circles to the tune of Deck the Halls. There were upside-down pies, invisible gravy, and crackers that told jokes in rhyme:
“Why did the turtle wear a Christmas hat?
Because his shell was feeling flat!”
Everyone laughed, even the Queen (though she later insisted she’d sneezed).
Father Christmas himself popped in via a trapdoor in the ceiling, wiping icing from his beard.
“Ho ho ho! Alice, thank you for saving Christmasland,” he boomed. “As a reward, you may choose one magical gift.”
“I’d like,” said Alice thoughtfully, “a snowflake that never melts and always remembers where it’s been.”
And so she received one — a shimmering, whispering snowflake that told her tales of every rooftop, chimney, and star it had kissed.
Chapter Four: Back Through the Bauble
All too soon, the sleigh reappeared, this time driven by a walrus in earmuffs.
“Time to go, young lady,” he said kindly. “Christmas Eve only lasts so long.”
Alice waved goodbye to the Rabbit, the Hatter, the Queen (who had warmed somewhat), and even the jigsaw puzzle, which winked at her.
She flew back through the chimney tunnel, landed softly by the fireplace, and found her house just as she had left it — except for one thing.
There, beside her hot cocoa, lay a tiny note tied with red ribbon:
“To Alice,
For bravery, cheer, and exceptional tickling.
— With love from Christmasland.”
And from then on, every Christmas Eve, if Alice listened very closely, she could hear puzzle pieces giggling, reindeer hooves on gingerbread roofs, and the White Rabbit jingling his way through the snow.
 

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“I Caught Bird Flu (Though I Don’t Even Fly)”

“I Caught Bird Flu (Though I Don’t Even Fly)”

“I Caught Bird Flu (Though I Don’t Even Fly)”

“I Caught Bird Flu (Though I Don’t Even Fly)”
I caught bird flu—oh what a surprise!
I don’t have feathers, nor wings in the skies.
I don’t peck at seeds or perch in a tree,
Yet somehow that flu came flapping at me.
No chirp in my throat, no squawk in my song,
No urge to migrate or flap all day long.
No nest made of twigs, no eggs in a clutch—
Still, bird flu found me and gave me a touch.
My sneeze went cuckoo, my cough went coo-coo,
My nose turned beaky—what could I do?
I dreamed of breadcrumbs and waddled in place,
With a pigeon’s pout all over my face.
I tried not to panic, I tried not to cluck,
But then I laid eggs (which was frankly bad luck).
The doctor just blinked and said with a frown,
“You’re grounded for now—don’t try flying down!”
So here I remain, a grounded young guy,
With a blanket, hot soup, and a gleam in my eye.
I caught bird flu, and I still don’t know why—
I don’t even fly! I don’t even fly!
 
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Posted by on July 19, 2025 in bird flu

 

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The Bus that Waited for No Wizard

The Bus that Waited for No Wizard

“The Bus that Waited for No Wizard”

It all began with toast.

More specifically, with the last piece of toast—golden, buttery, and tragically flung across the room when the boy, Alfie, accidentally elbowed the plate in his hurry.

“By the stars, Alfie!” exclaimed the old wizard, Professor Wigglewand, brushing crumbs from his beard. “That was my toast!”

“No time!” Alfie cried, hopping into his oversized shoes. “The bus! The bus leaves in three minutes!

Professor Wigglewand grabbed his pointy hat (which was still dripping with marmalade from breakfast) and hobbled to the door, his robe flapping like a bedsheet in a gale.

The two of them burst into the street, Alfie leading the charge, the wizard puffing behind. The bus stop was just down the hill—but naturally, the hill had recently been repaved with cobblestones so slippery they might as well have been made of banana skins.

“I told you we should’ve used the teleportation spoon!” puffed Wigglewand.

“You turned it into a ladle last time!” Alfie shouted back.

Ahead, the Number 19 Magical Express was already revving its enchanted engine, clouds of cinnamon-scented smoke puffing from the tailpipe. The bus driver, a grumpy ogre in a tweed cap, eyed them with mild disinterest.

“Hold it!” Alfie shouted. “Wait!”

The bus hissed and squeaked and began to pull away.

Wigglewand raised his wand and—poof!—turned his walking stick into a pogo stick. With one mighty bounce, he shot into the air, over Alfie’s head, and landed squarely in the middle of the road, arms flailing.

The bus screeched to a halt.

“Nice one, Professor!” Alfie said, panting as he caught up.

They clambered aboard, both out of breath and covered in toast crumbs and triumph.

“Cutting it fine, eh?” the ogre grunted, as the doors swung closed behind them.

Wigglewand winked, adjusted his marmalade-streaked hat, and muttered, “Better late than toastless.”

wizard and toast
 
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Posted by on July 19, 2025 in story, wizard

 

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Chase the White Rabbit: A New Alice in Wonderland Adventure

Chase the White Rabbit: A New Alice in Wonderland Adventure
a new alice in wonderland story

Alice was sipping her tea with a sigh,
When a blur dashed past with a glint in its eye.
A rabbit—white-furred, with a waistcoat and frown—
Was muttering, “Goodness! I’m terribly down!”

She blinked once or twice, then sprang to her feet,
For chasing odd rabbits is never a feat
That’s best left to reason, or clocks, or to maps—
So off she did tumble through twists, turns, and gaps.

He darted through hedges, then dove down a hole,
(A perfectly rabbit-sized dark rabbit hole),
And Alice, not stopping to question the fall,
Went tumbling behind, skirts and ribbons and all.

She fell past the teacups, past tables and hats,
Past mirrors and muffins and sleepy old cats.
She landed (quite gently) on carpeting red—
The White Rabbit gone, but his echo just said:

“I’m late for a something! A thing! Or a who!”
(Though what that might mean, Alice hadn’t a clue.)
Still, onward she went in pursuit of his tail,
Through puddles of poetry, puddings and snail.

So if ever you’re feeling a touch out of sorts,
And time seems to twitch in peculiar contorts,
Just follow the White Rabbit—don’t ask him why—
For Wonderland waits where the clocks go awry.

 

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I am a Cat, it said smiling at her

I am a Cat, it said smiling at her

I am a Cat, it said smiling at her

I am a Cat, it said smiling at her,

A Cheshire Cat, you can tell by my fur,

My paws and whiskers are also a hint,

But the smile on my face is most significant.

 *

I can see by your fur, said Alice – I do,

And also your paws and whiskers – it’s true,

But that smile on your face has me all in a tizz,

Coming and going in such a whiz.

*

Still smiling at Alice, the Cat dryly replied,

You’d never believe me; you’d think I had lied,

If the smile on my face was gone – it’s a fact,

No one would listen or look at this Cat.

*

Without offering Alice the chance to reply,

The Cat went on with his horrible lie,

Creeping closer and closer, until ever so near,

When he pounced, lashed out, cutting her ear.

*

Feeling the hurt and the blood running down,

Alice said, Oh, I was such a clown,

To have ever believed a Cat with a grin,

Take that, and that, you horrible thing!

 

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