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1/31/2022

Morning Prayer.

I like tepid sheets, steamy sweats, and the new,
777 lucky necklace on my collarbone. I like black
snakes, skate shoes, platforms, and a cutthroat

game of horse. I miss layups and foul shots, killing
the three-pointer. I haven't eaten out in eight years.
Every day, I clean my yellow place for a party of one.

I must alternate four and five miles. I like street faith
and trucker hats. I like Eagle smokes, and The Judge
made me weep. I have fourteen old school tattoos

that need retouching. Like all men, I believe in fake
sugar, the weather radar, the lost mail, and the vicious,
adopted dog. I believe that each tree holds the dead

inside. If we listen, they speak to us. I believe that light
lives deep within some eyes, and that countless others
choose leaden vision. I believe that they will someday

be leaving, and the others will be coming. I like twisty
soft serve and Catawba Mountain. For my size, I surprise
everyone in the weight room. I believe in the blink,

the grin, the open-palmed wave, and the thumbs-up,
that intention and silence are divine. I'm terrible
with orders. I roll my eyes at suggestions. My recycling

is half-hearted at best. I like hand-hot, blue blankets,
loose T-shirts, skinny fucks, hard drums, no spoons,
and weird fish. I believe that birds carry messages

on their wings. I like knee socks and long, boy shorts,
and I spend most days in solitude. The names Buddha
and Jesus make me cringe. Laughing and shaking heads,

they live in the mountains, climbing like me, one small
reach and step at a time. Whoever you are, if you hear
me, hugs are over-rated, but I’m sure I’d like to walk

today. Four miles, counterclockwise. At all times,
I’ll be carrying three reachable weapons, just to be
safe.

C.A. MacConnell

P.S. Book Five is coming along. It's just pouring out of me. My hands can barely keep up with my brain, ha. Stay tuned.

1/29/2022

Photo: Singing to You.

 

C.A. MacConnell

Morning Coffee, Attica

Don't think I have ever altered this piece. Rare for me, but it feels finished, I suppose...came to me one morning when I was doing research for THE HOLE. Chk out that intense work, if you get a chance. The book is fast-moving, but it's also an incredible work of art. People are really responding to it, which was my hope. Shaking things up, yes. Sometimes, after people read it, they just look at me with a knowing nod, which is rad. Like a secret "The Hole" club. Hope you like this piece, and I hope you just ate a breakfast burrito, like I did. Love to you, C.A.

Morning Coffee, Attica

Only black,
Brazilian
brew
back then --
Jesus,
bring me the grandfather
clock.
I was wound up with her.
And now, the baby's not a baby.
I am one
of the last
of the few
with an out
date.
Now, instant, I'd kill for you,
you fucker.
It doesn't matter if it's Tuesday.
Waiting for the cleaner,
the weak, lying, prick from the south,
I bolt upright
and consider
the country.
In brave time,
six years,
I'll buy a blue-grey,
six-toed,
one-eyed
beast named
Bandeira,
make him a home-bed.
I do what I can.
I hang on the bars.
Yesterday, I traded a joint
for the hot.
Mop man,
slide the bag
of scalding water
under the hell door.
I'm sure you understand the quick
pour.
When the dogs aren't looking,
maybe I could make a deal
with a visitor
and fit inside one sister's
old, wet,
unbleached
pocket.

C.A. MacConnell

1/27/2022

Milk Carton

Proof of life:

Tangled hair, twisted throw.
The animal and I,
We wake.

Strange captor calls from the
Family.

Now, stretching. True, I'm no brow-beauty.
Some other missing girl will
Bring the ransom
Home.
She'll be a longer living wall fly.
Some say she'll stick.

Ground coffee, look here, I make the black
Law. I admit, it's a little

Strong.

Call the shepherds. They know
Blood.
Find the sign,
The lost shoe,
The search team, the one
Phone call,
The right or wrong
Words. Relatives know how to make a
Deal. Someone finds a bad sock,

A trace.

Hero, empty or full, don't forget the suit
case.

C.A. MacConnell

1/25/2022

Migration

Hi there. Often, I get lost in these poems; it's as if I'm singing to a crowd the whole time I'm working on them. Time flies by, and I don't even realize it. That's the case today. I love that feeling, that place, that art zone. I love the solitude, and the meditative aspect of the process. I started going to that place when I was very little -- I was always a seeker of all things imagination-based. Maybe I was searching for peace or god, I dunno. Once I learned how to write, I started sinking deeply into that artist zone. I used to feel it when I edited movies at school too. I'd be in that editing room for days and not even realize it. Man, that building was haunted too, ha. I loved it.

I've always craved to have that same artistic depth with another person, a partner, but so far, it comes to me solo. I dream about the shared possibility sometimes. And inside these words, I can say all of the things I always wanted to say. Hope you like the piece. C.A.

Migration

You, like a pale, striking, strange
hawk, live on the wind; You bring

home the flawless glide. You leave
in a rapid, reckless climb. For miles,

the vision is clear; you see the wild,
furious drive. Alone, air and sky

keep you alive. You swallow all
distant shapes -- the crawlers,

and the motionless -- like a raging
wild fire. You are quick to dive.

Most days, you are nearly silent,
but for the tree calls. With weather,

there comes a sudden, hidden
message – You are safe, I imagine.

Maybe you’re nesting, looking
backwards in the secret, mother

pine. Almost human now. Organic,
black licorice and dark chocolate.

Walking close, I step on the heels
of your shoes. Hurry, up above,

I spy an angry rain.
Just in time,
we’re back. I look to you for wheat

pancakes.

C.A. MacConnell

Photo: Baby Shoes

 

C.A. MacConnell

P.S. I'm about 50pp. into BOOK FIVE! Writing away. In the meantime, check out my other books here. <3 to you, C.A.

1/24/2022

Photo.

 

A little guy who likes to interrupt my walks.

C.A. MacConnell

Butterscotch and Charlie

When I was little, we had two hamsters -- Butterscotch and Charlie. Now, for good reason, most of the time we kept them apart. Despite this careful attention, every now and then my brother and I lifted them out of the cages and tortured them by putting them in our slippers, soon pretending that they were riding around in spaceships. Not sure if they enjoyed the homemade spaceships, but at the time, we wholly believed that they were thrilled about the adventures. Seemed like they dug the rides, especially when we made the following sound effects: "Vroom, vroom, proo...vroocrash." That is exactly accurate.

Unfortunately, we were not careful when it came to watching the hamsters during their spaceship travel. Soon after one of these excursions, Butterscotch began to look really, well…fat. We told Mom that she looked fat, and Veterinary Mom made an "O" with her mouth.

Soon, the word was out: Butterscotch was going to have babies.

I was sure that Butterscotch's babies were from outer space, due to her slipper/moon travel. Intently watching the cage each day, I obsessively waited for the alien babies to arrive. Finally, due to my nonstop observation, Butterscotch started popping out little hamsters, and when I excitedly crept up to her cage, I saw two tiny, disgusting, slimy beasts there. No, not what I expected at all. Eyes shut, they resembled squirming goo. Silly Putty.

But I had it all planned -- I was going to teach them distant planet travel, show them the ropes, and the possibilities were thrilling. But then, I looked a little closer, and I discovered something catastrophic. Butterscotch was licking...no...chewing on...no...eating her babies. Horrified, I realized that there may have been more little ones before I entered the scene, that two or three were probably already gone. Mesmerized, bug-eyed, I watched and watched, making sure. Definitely, she was downing them, and it was nasty. Confused, I ran to get Mom.

When Mom observed Butterscotch's behavior, she made this weird face -- a face that flipped between grossed out and over-the-top calm; I suppose that Mom was trying to hide her terror.

It was the first moment that I realized this:  Mom had no idea what to do.

I yelled, "Mom! Save the babies!"

Mom shooed me away, but after some time passed, when I returned to the cages, only Butterscotch and Charlie were there. Assuming that Mom saved the babies, I was convinced that they returned to their home planet. I knew all about aliens; the movies explained these topics. But something bothered me. During this whole catastrophic scene, Charlie just hung out, ate, and then ran on his wheel.

Not long after, Butterscotch was missing. We scanned the house – under the couch cushion, the corners of every room, under the sheets, the heating duct. Nada. Then, after a while, we gave up and started sniffing around. Still, nothing. Charlie was intent on the wheel, but after a few weeks, he disappeared as well. And so did the cages.

But soon, a black toy poodle appeared in place of the hamsters. Pepper. Pepper lost her shit with a delivery man, and then she took out part of my brother’s leg, and then Pepper disappeared. So, a white Maltese, Tater (aka Mrs. Potato Head), appeared in her place. (My name choice). Tater stuck around for about 100 years. Even when she only had one toe left, Tater was still alive.

To this day, when asked about Butterscotch, Mom changes the subject or starts running the disposal. She even swears that Charlie's name was Caramel, Biscuit, or something cute and edible. But now that I'm mature, due to years of intense therapy, I've uncovered the real story, which is this: Pepper is living on a farm with a loving old lady, Tater's foot is still breathing and comforting a baby, Butterscotch hitched a ride on a spaceship and joined her children on their home planet, and Charlie fled the U.S. to continue his career as a salesman/gigolo.

All growing up, Mom tried to protect me from pain, and Dad was missing.

Aye, it's all right to dig in, to remember, to discover the clues to the past, but sometimes, with parents, when mulling over strange, uncomfortable, questionable scenes, I have to remember one key thing -- they did the best they could. They still are doing the best they can. I'm forty-seven, and most of the time, I have no idea what I'm doing. If I had a child, I'd totally be winging it most of the time.

But I have learned one important thing. I suppose I can take a break from spending my life seeking Charlies, who are in another country, running on a wheel.

C.A. MacConnell

1/19/2022

Photo: You'll Feel.

 

C.A. MacConnell

The Market

Trying something different here, a little exercise in making the mess intentional. My usual style is to follow a pattern. Here, I try to go against the pattern, while making other patterns. Just playing around. Could make an interesting song w/ this one. A little secret for you. I think it has a little intentional emotion and power to it. <3, C.A.

The Market

Oxygen, devotion, desire, and spare change
return to those who wait. I am
god, and you are god, and this is god,
and so is the snake.

Confused tycoons
are fasting. Beneath them –
countless park bears
buried in camp-site scraps.

In between, together, come evening,
smart, patient wolves
chew on bone.
By noon, the nonprofit is no more
than a dried-up tit,
and all of my income
is buried in shit.

Little, dark dream circles
under my eyes.
Last night, you
had silver, sharp canines. When we

kissed, I tasted metal. No matter, no
mind.
Call me an illusion scavenger.
I love even the well, and the wait,

and the hell.
Following, I am no more
than an air-sucking parachute
fish-tailing on the drag strip.
For years,
I’ve taken the bait.
Sometimes, my ring

fingers freeze, knuckles locked stuck,
closed from the trigger grip.
With time,
movement tears apart

the tricky numb,
and suddenly, fist to heart,
you return.
Up ahead, the crowd breaks,

revealing
the Market. Yes, I make a muscle,
but can I pay with food stamps.
Now,
my blanket is damp, and I peel open
the bad eye.
Today, again – ridges,

cheap sheets, yellow,
and I’m ashamed
of the bruised peaches.
No lip, no skin,

no squinting eye, no smirk
beside me.
Empty bleachers. See, I am god,
and you are god, and this

is god, and the snake
is god, and so is the penniless
or high-class date.
People tell me that my hair is pretty.
The voices should be more
sing-song. People tell me
that my hair

is pretty. Like
always,
I stand
like a rock.

C.A. MacConnell

1/17/2022

Photo: Missing Windows.

 

C.A. MacConnell

Photo: Winter. Are You Looking for a Good Read?

 

Hi, did you check out THE HOLE yet? Hope so! This photo I took yesterday reminded me of the book. Just a simple li'l shot, but I was digging it. Kinda gave me a "feel." Guess I prefer art that "suggests" a feeling, rather than works that "tell" me how to feel. Music too. For instance, describing two people's lips in a creative, weird way vs. saying, "They kissed passionately." Just my thing. Not that there isn't a place for big "landscape photos with fog in the shape of nursing mothers" of course...ha. I wouldn't mind capturing that "unbelievable landscape shot" that people wait all day for. Hells yeah.

Anyway, I digress. THE HOLE is getting great reviews and creeping up the charts as I write to you. Rad. If you like dark, introspective, addictive characters, twists and turns, and witty dialogue, you'll like this sucker. It will jerk you around a bit. Check it out here.

On another note, if you like unbelievably creative dialogue, a tricky, gritty romance, heavy setting depth, and a hell of an adventure, check out THE HOUSE OF ANCHOR.

If you want a fast-paced mystery that's appropriate for all ages, make sure to look up STRANGE SKIN.

And finally, if you want real, raw romance, and if you want to dig deep, feel, and join one woman's journey to heal, check out my debut, GRIFFIN FARM.

Time to head out for a snow walk...love it. Always feels like I'm on the moon, because it's so quiet...everyone's all hunkered down. :)

Love to you,
C.A. MacConnell

1/15/2022

Bare Naked Yoga

Here's a creative nonfiction/comedy piece for you today. Hope it gives you a laugh. Just rewrote this. Hope you like it. Love, C.A. 

Bare Naked Yoga

Back when I was teaching yoga, there were many unforgettable classes. For instance, during one class, outside the gym, someone busted my car windows, and I, the serene teacher, saw the whole act go down, and I yelled, “Oh, fuck.” No, not in Sanskrit. Here’s another memorable class…

Clearly, I remember the yellowish, clean, new, fresh, bamboo space. I felt honored to be there, as this studio was an up-and-coming addition in the area, so I was slightly nervous about perfecting my moves and voice. The room lighting held a peaceful, dimmed, soft glow, and the Kim Taylor tunes were bleeding out from the top-notch speakers. Everything was so smooth.

Too smooth.

I had a full class. Knowing the opening routine, each student was already slickly moving, in unison. All was well and calm in the space. Well, at first anyhow. Then, somewhere in the middle of the sun salutations, one organic-cotton-layered woman decided she was too hot, and I guess she was in a hurry to rid herself of that long-sleeved, open-backed top shirt so she wouldn't miss out on anything...

Anyway, when she took a hold of her top shirt and pulled it up, she accidentally grabbed the shirt underneath it as well. As a result, she whipped that bottom layer right off too. For a minute, both shirts were caught on her arms and her neck, completely covering her head. What was visible? Only her bra and deer leggings.

She was pretty much naked and stuck.

Studying the whole scene, I muttered something about the breath in a smooth "yoga tone," wondering what her next move may be.

She was frozen there, wiggling, stuck. When she finally wormed her way out, her face resembled an ostrich – big-eyed, thin-necked, startled, and confused. She looked down, realizing she wore nothing but a see-through, white, lace bra. No, not a sports bra. A romantic number. With her shocked expression holding strong, she quickly realized that she was half-naked, and she began to frantically search for the shirt she was supposed to still be wearing; however, the elusive shirt was balled up somewhere within the other one.

Around her, straight-faced, breathing heavily, everyone continued the sun salutations.

Stumbling around, standing there in her bra, she searched for cover.

I’d like to say that I, too, maintained an aura of peace and love, but I soon totally lost my shit and busted out in booming laughter.

Then everyone in the room broke stride and cracked up.

As much as I tried to continue with the flow, like a toddler in a church pew, I could not stop laughing, so then I decided to simply go with it. I announced, "Man, you must feel so free after doing my yoga! So free, you're getting naked right here and now! That's so awesome!"

I was howling. I wouldn't stop. I said, "See, my yoga sets you free!" and "I can feel the love in the room!" Once I got on a roll, I had a hard time putting on the brakes.

By then, the half-naked lady was cracking up as well. She responded, "That didn't work out how I thought it would," referring to her attempted, quick, superhero clothes change. Then she finally found her T-shirt and slipped it on.

Anyway, eventually, I was able to regain my composure and finish the class, but the entire rest of the evening, I had an interesting smirk going on, thinking about my wild, free yoga, and how I might need to rename the class, "Mac's Bare Naked Yoga: It'll Set You Free."

Never thought I'd be teaching bare naked yoga. Never know what I might get into. Never say never. Good luck with clothes today. Be careful. And remember, no matter what the plans may be, even when attempting spiritual endeavors, the universe may have other plans, throwing an ostrich and a lacy bra right in the way, and suddenly, the deep, well-planned, structured yoga lesson suddenly changes and becomes simply this: loosen up and remember to have fun.

C.A. MacConnell

1/13/2022

Mansion

We broke in.
It was all
about the weather.
Seven times,
the scattered sky
spoke through
heat lightning,
and new clouds
coughed above us,
mostly hanging
in patchy rows.
Behind us, the stone
mansion. Someday,
I'll put up an offer.
We swam close
in the strange,
perfect pool;
we were the ice
on the dog day.
Let’s get dressed.
Rain’s comin’
.
On the deck,
you checked
my muscle.

C.A. MacConnell

1/12/2022

Magazines

 

Magazines

Everyone's Looking.
Magazines. I'm Over Here --
Deep Down Clearance Aisle.

-- C.A. MacConnell

1/11/2022

Photo.

 

C.A. MacConnell

P.S. Do something that makes you and others happy. Trust yourself.

1/09/2022

Photo: Tours

 

C.A. MacConnell

Love Poem

Not my usual style...more of a thought train...still, I like the feel of it. Hope you dig it. Love, C.A.

Love Poem

I need a guitar,
and a new tattoo.
I need a dollar
to buy a lotto ticket.
Winner winner chicken dinner.
I need a woman
to show me how to heal.
I need a man
with a tattered jacket,
and a trick up his sleeve.
I need a black Camaro
with Kentucky plates,
and a rooster, a dog, and a glove.
I need a mailbox that leans,
and a doctor
who knows how to fuck.
If I could go back,
I'd take up the drums,
just for the muscle.
I need a mighty voice, a piano,
and a damn safe spork.
I need a shovel, a white room,
a backpack,
and some noise.
I need new employment
in the sky.
My eye is twitching.
My ears are ringing.
My ears are burning.
My eyes are burning.
There is one person
I'd like to mention.

C.A. MacConnell

1/07/2022

The Lost River

I just tinkered with this a little. I really dig it. A wonderful story, based on a true one. Hope you like the piece. Makes me grin at the idea of human nature and how we always want to "know," when in reality, the ambiguity and uncertainty of life is ever-present, regardless. A little peek into my secret thought process behind this.

*The Lost River, located at Natural Bridge, Virginia, is so named because its source and destination are unknown, despite desperate attempts by many to locate them.


The Lost River*

So close.
They could hear the rush of water.
They imagined the stillness of its end,
but the true body, the beginning,
remained unknown. For many years,
full-chested men
set out on reckless rides
with restless horses;
the beasts grew tired
from the miles and the whip
and soon, they loped
with half-open mouths,
lips flapping to the breath game,
long teeth chomping to spit,
white foam lathering bits.
For decades, strange men
drank to exploding rock,
leaping over logs,
splashing through fallen leaves,
coughing up the muck of dreams,
hiking deep into the evergreen,
hunting, killing, searching
for the River’s source.
So close.
Later, some bit nails or scratched skin.
Others clawed at cheeks and chins,
and the wicked chase
drove them into mad fits,
a red-faced, grownup colic.
They cut permanent grooves,
carving into anything worth carving.
Names, initials, and the mess
of battle fields
spelled out the truth –
chicken scrawl showed the dates,
the horrible instants
when bone by bone, they suddenly
gave up.
Dropping the dynamite, struck
into tired, tight-lipped statues,
forced into stone silence,
they checked the sky,
guessing the weather
for the hard ride home.
So close.
And they returned to families
with no news, no notes, no souvenirs,
not even a single clue.
Some made fists, kicking their kid-like legs.
But meanwhile, back near The Lost River,
in the new, startling quiet, the brave
moment when the forest settled,
after all exploring men had slipped away,
perhaps then came life.
Maybe, in the clear, the forest Natives,
the watchers, grew restless, finally waking,
rising up from their hiding places,
the glowing, fire-lit caves,
their handmade homes,   
creeping out of thick shadows
like smiling, winking, slender, so-close-blue,
rich flames; easily, they lived inside
the swallowing art of wet secrecy.
Together, big-eyed, camouflaged
by leaves, they shook their heads, 
and when the twigs scattered,
they studied the damage,
knowing the truth,
that the River’s source was always present,
resting deep, deep inside
the mystery, the silent time
when the noise of horse men ended,
when the laughing trees whispered,
They are still coming.

C.A. MacConnell

1/03/2022

The Pit Escape

Just wrote this funny little bit. Hope to make you laugh. Love, C.A.

The Pit Escape

Day to day, my highly anticipated, intense, well-charted walking/exercise routine is based upon possible animal sightings. That's right, I am the wildlife queen clad in sweats, layers, and Sauconys. The locations vary, but on one particular beast-influenced, mapped-out course, I know most of the area dogs:  Bismark the Shep, the tan Pit and Boxer behind the clear window, the two Pugs, the yellow Lab and Goldendoodle, and the enormous German Shepherd on the wall, a damn dinosaur-sized demon. Then there's the Dachshund, the Chihuahua, the raggedy farm dog, Argo the debonair Shep, a small, thin Shep who bolted and ravished me once, and that solo, dark, shadowy, somber one behind the dirty window who barks in baritone. Some owners can suck me.

I think I covered most of them. Stay with me...

Anyway, so I've walked this particular route off and on for about eight years. Bismark knows me well...he's black, fierce, and honestly, no one should go near him, but he's probably too old to kill people. Still, I wouldn't take a chance on him; however, like a true Shepherd, when he warmed up to me, his attitude became this:  she is mine, all mine, and no one else can be with her. Argo feels the same way; he adores me passionately and refuses to let anyone draw near me; he was furious when the skinny Shepherd ran after me. Yes, Argo saw it all go down, and he was absolutely jealous. The yellow Lab can be mouthy and greedy, but the Goldendoodle is sweet, inquisitive, and anxious. Man, the buffalo-shaped German Shepherd on the wall will kill you, your mom, your baby, me, a harp seal, your puppy. If he could swim, he'd kill a megalodon. I wouldn't go near that one. Give him space, space, space. I've seen him hop down and tear into someone's leg. That guy deserved it, but still. The Dachshund digs me, but his owner's an asshole. The Chihuahua is nasty, but that little guy can jump ten feet; he could pole vault the fuck out of any human.

Now we come to the tan Pit and the Boxer behind the clear front window. For eight years, a few times a week, I've walked by, and there they are, barking at me from behind the glass. Barking their asses off. Barking like they'll never be able to bark again in their lives. I always wave and shout, "Hey guys!" but on the inside, I think, Thank god the window's there, and if it ever breaks, I'm in serious trouble.

Wellllllll...yesterday, I was walking this route, casually striding by that particular window, humming "Weird Fishes," by Radiohead, when suddenly, out of the corner of my eye, I saw a flash of gold, yellow, tan, and maybe some red flames...yes...that tan Pit Bull (she can bench-press 605 lbs) was running at me full force -- barking like a mad wolf, jaws flapping, eating up ground in an intense blur, a fully focused, inferno of hair, juice, teeth, vomit, piss, bile, shit, razors, swords, mallets, who knew. 

I thought, I'm dead, this is it, nothing I can do at all. So, I simply stood there, waiting for the bloody onslaught. Giving up, feeling full surrender take hold, I looked her right in those beady little black eyes. And still she charged, puffing out her massive chest like a bodybuilder crossed with a pin-up queen crossed with Satan.

But as I stared her down, thinking, Bring it on, I noticed something odd, eerie, strange, bizarro, you get the drift. Yes, she was, indeed, charging at me, and she was showing teeth -- that vice of a jaw -- but she wasn't growling at all. Suddenly silent, still intent on her mission -- me -- she began to smile and drool. Faster and faster, she ran, but by the time she stepped on my foot, she wagged her tail like a fat whip.

Her tongue hung out loose, a useless, pinkish-whitish slide, and her paws were covered with gooey mud. Then it came -- she jumped up on me and...I couldn't believe it...began to sloppily kiss me all over. I might add, she had nice breath. Then she pawed at me, kissed me, rubbed her head on me, stopped to pee, dug at the ground, jumped around, then pawed at me some more, licking my jacket.

Laughing, relieved, I petted her furiously, saying, "Hey, baby."

No lie. I swear, out of those eyes or frothy jaws, I heard her mentally speak this:  "FINALLY! That damn window! It's been eight years! I finally get to touch you."

I scratched her head, her ears, and I smiled wide, getting choked up. Out loud, I said, "I understand."

As all love fests end, so did this one. Alas, her owner appeared, and it utterly ruined the moment.

I have no idea how or why she finally got loose, but I'll never forget the unbelievable, long-awaited excitement that furry face held inside each crease and tuft of hair, and the utter relief that bled out of her watery eyes when she finally reached me, shocked by her greatest feat. In her dog world, that moment seemed to be nothing less than golden. Eight years. Finally. To her, one morning's escape meant everything.

And I didn't even know her name. Shrug. Wouldn't be the first time.

C.A. MacConnell

1/01/2022

Photo: Skater, Devou Park.

 

Another shot that inspired my second book, THE HOUSE OF ANCHOR. :) This book is strangely dynamic -- both dark and utterly hilarious. Like all of my books, it's a mystery at heart, but one with deep undertones. Check it out.

Here's my author page...you can find links to all four of my books and descriptions here. Hope you get a chance to read my work. It's slick.

HAPPY NEW YEAR TO YOU! Thanks so much for supporting my art. I hope this year brings peace for all of us. Also, laughter. I just sent a text to a friend...a classic pic of Zach Galifianakis where he's saying, "I consider myself a one-man wolf pack." Indeed, haha. I adore his humor...right up my alley.

Have a great day, wherever you are,
C.A. MacConnell