Cajun Mutt Press Featured Writer 10/27/23

Snow Drift

Kindred spirits,
snow drifts and
the owl takes
refuge from the
storm.

Field mouse
appearing
from unthinkable
night, brave as a
rogue shooting star.

I huddle in the safe
confines of suburbian
refuge, regrets and
bourbon, the dark
and the light; intertwined.

Words spoken in
homage to the dead,
I forgive you, echo the
ghost of a tortured past.

Orange and red flames
intermingle, logs are snakes,
hissing upon a sputtering fire.

In a flash, the power shifts
to the owl outside, claws
snap, a stranglehold,
the mouse never stood
a chance.

©2023 Wayne Russell All rights reserved.

Brother Wayne

Wayne Russell has been published in many zines, magazines, and anthologies. Both online and in print. In his spare time, he likes to practice his guitar, sing, creative writing, and photography. Wayne’s first full-length poetry book Where Angels Fear can be purchased on Amazon.

Cajun Mutt Press FeaturedWriter 09/29/23

Skinning Bugs

“You can draw what you want, you can
read what you want, you can stay up late
watching old monster movies if you want…
But you will do this, you are going to do this:
you need to learn skills for the real world!”
My father was yelling at me, but it was not
in anger, it was out of sincere exasperation.

I didn’t want to do it — no way, but I knew
how limited my options were, and my dad
had begun his argument with more gives
than I had yet been granted, all at once.
“Please,” he said. “Do this and then we
will all get on with what’s left of our day.”
I felt the redness of my cheeks, I felt
hornet stings in my eyes, I felt my tears
flow out the stressed dams of my eyes.
He threw the rabbit at my feet…

And as shown, as told,
I skinned the rabbit.

My dad was happy I did it.
When my tears dried, I spent
the rest of my day drawing.

I hated my dad that day
but I have loved him for it.

Slackers

The secret of the slacker is they rarely
make mistakes, so they can present well
to management, and they rarely make
mistakes because they don’t work
hard enough or often enough to create
opportunities for errors to occur.
When hard working staff decide to work
together, leaving the slackers to work
with each other, none of the slackers
will have a hard worker to hide behind,
and be forced to work or else, they will
create a third option for themselves,
and will spend their energies not working,
but work to make hard workers look bad.

The hard-working staff pick up the slack
doing twice the workload which doubles
the potential for mistakes.
When the hard-working staff picking up
the slack of the slacker, doing more work,
and tiring faster, makes a mistake that
shouldn’t have been their mistake to make
in the first place, the slacker will point
in fake righteousness and triumph and say,
“See? See? There, I told you! Do you see?”

… As they stick their nose
up some manager’s starfish.

Fires Of Summer   

How did we sleep
while our forests
were felled by fires,
homes were burned
and lives imperilled?

We have woken up with
smoke choked throats.

3 POEMS FROM LEPER MOSH (Cajun Mutt Press 2022)

How You Hurt

True, you would not hurt a fly,
but is it likely you would help it?
You would await the arrival of another,
to whom you would delegate the duty of aid.

As you wait for this one to arrive,
you would watch the harmed creature writhe,
all the while claiming inability to help.

If no one arrives for you to delegate to,
you will stand idly by, as they say,
and you will watch as life leaves it,
without it ever dawning on you to feel
guilt over your inaction, and lethargy.

True, you would not hurt a fly.

Ascent

She had
the only private room
in the ward.
In there, a scent
of something unknown,
unfamiliar yet, inevitable
greeted your entrance.
You stood
at the foot of her bed.
She broke
the silence
between you,
asked, if you remembered
how she used to look
and you did…
She asked, if you remembered
times she began to speak
but did not continue…
And you did.

It was hard for her to believe
you remembered her beauty
beyond the ravage of the malignant.
Her dreams run dry:
she prayed to drown.

She had
wild
blue-green eyes

not even cancer could steal.

Your bodies
told you once,
you existed.

Nothing was as sacred,
as profane, as the fading warmth.
Her flight left lingering
a remembered scent of a perfume
nameless and indelible.

You perpetuate
the pedestal
she flies from.

Route

Oncoming cars slow:
I walk where pedestrians
are not allowed.
Many well worn
roads cover our world.
You might drive fast,
while I walk along;
you will see wind swept
signs as swift blurs,
only gaining sight
in cracked rear view mirrors.
I will see them all too clearly,
weary at roadside.
Dried clumps and flecks
of dead flies loosen
from grills, wipers, mirrors
in swift passage.
There are always live flies
above road kill.
Roads we choose may
be under construction.
A sniper upon an overpass
may take aim and fire.
Municipal bridges in derelict
ridings may collapse
beneath us as we cross.
You drive. I walk. But if
you break down, I will
walk no further on

©2023 David Alec Knight All rights reserved.

Brother Knight

David Alec Knight grew up in Chatham, Ontario, Canada.

He includes his middle name in his pen name as a means of disambiguation, his first and last name being fairly common. It is in response to being ignorantly perceived as a pretension by others that he wrote the poem “Disambiguation”.

In 2021, David was recipient of The Ted Plantos Memorial Award for Poetry. His first book of poetry, The Heart Is A Hollow Organ, soon followed. His second book of poetry, LEPER MOSH, was published by Cajun Mutt Press in 2022. It featured his artwork on the cover. Cajun Mutt Press would also feature a portfolio of his artwork online, as well as publishing his first full color comic story online, WRATH: The Masks We Wear.

Recent poems have appeared in Verse Afire, Cajun Mutt Press Featured Poet, The Lothlorien Poetry Journal and Medusa’s Kitchen. Anthology appearances include By The Wishing Tree, Poets For Ukraine Volume 1, Love Lies Bleeding, Phantom Parade, and The Cajun Mutt Press Halloween Anthology Zine 2022.

David sees dark and light around him in equal measure and that is reflected in his poetry, whether exploring working class themes, neurodivergence, addiction, urban living, our conflict with Nature, and/or the effects all these things have on individuals and relationships.

David works full-time in Long Term Care.

Cajun Mutt Press Featured Writer 09/22/23

The Chosen

How fragile everything is
A spirit invaded her body
A weaver of confusion and chaos
Pursuing the impossible

We had died in an ancient ritual
In a different time
Bound by the cruelty of the act
We relive the pain to survive

Your blood drawn by their claws
Is for the shadows
Banishing the unclean
She steps into the fire

Sacrificing herself to save you
She burns as a symbol of hope
Opening a portal from the past
You walk through

The spirit of chaos and confusion
Indulging in your presence once more

Nobody knows….. Why
Mortal wounds bleed
We do not speak of it
We almost don’t remember it

In her sleep she knows death is before dawn
She shreds her flesh so you can be immortal

We do not speak of it
Nobody knows…. Why
Mortal wounds bleed

Except….

The Chosen Few

©2023 Sinead Mcguigan All rights reserved.

Sister Mcguigan

Sinead Mcguigan, a poet and psychology graduate from University College Dublin Ireland writes poetry that explores the human condition and the deepest emotions connected to experience. Sinead wrote her first solo collection A Gift and a Curse while recovering from cancer; her new book Unbound is also available on Amazon. Sinead’s main interests are travel concerts and art. She often collaborates with artists and has appeared alongside their work in many publications. The latest poem picked by poet laureate James Morehead to be featured on his podcast and magazine Viewless Wings. You can read more of her poetry on Instagram/Facebook @sineadmcgpoetry

Cajun Mutt Press Featured Writer 07/19/23

There’s No Bridge Over the Styx

I’ve burned many, many bridges in my life,
perfectly sound constructs that never
did anyone any harm.

I drenched them in four-star,
tossed a lighter over my shoulder, movie-style
and strode off without a backwards glance.

If there is a hell, a fiery one, not just other people,
I think mine will be to relive every last immolation,
ad infinitum, ad nauseam.

Likely they’ll provide a bucket: “Here,
for your tears, to douse the flames or
build ash castles afterwards. Your call.”

©2023 Jim Murdoch All rights reserved.

Jim Murdoch

Jim Murdoch has been writing poetry for fifty years and has graced the pages of many now-defunct magazines and a few, like Ink, Sweat and Tears, The Lake and Eclectica, that are still hanging on in there. For ten years he ran the literary blog The Truth About Lies but now lives quietly in Scotland with his wife and (increasingly) next-door’s cat. He has published two books of poetry, a short story collection, and four novels.

Cajun Mutt Press Featured Writer 05/24/23

WATCHING THE ASHES

sun dips
moon winks

overhead
stars align

here we are
spirit breaths,
sparks and smoke

placing
our hopes
on paper,
setting them
on fire

knowing
the promises
we keep are
greater than
the flames
testing us

©2023 Dr. Roger G. Singer All rights reserved.

Dr. Roger G. Singer

Dr. Singer has had over 1,200 poems published on the internet, magazines and in books and is a Pushcart Award Nominee. Some of the magazines that have accepted his poems for publication are: Westward Quarterly, Jerry Jazz, SP Quill, Avocet, Underground Voices, Outlaw Poetry, Literary Fever, Dance of my Hands, Language & Culture, The Stray Branch, Tipton Poetry Indigo Rising, Down in the Dirt, Fullosia Press, Orbis, Penwood Review, Subtle Tea, Ambassador Poetry Award, Massachusetts State Poetry Society. Louisiana State Poetry Society Award. Readers Award Orbis Magazine 2019. Arizona State Poetry Award 2020. Mad Swirl Anthology 2018, 2019.