DIXIE DEATH DIARY is not just a poetry collection--it's a cinematic exorcism. A visceral Southern reckoning scrawled in blood, sweat, and cigarette ash. These aren't poems that whisper politely from the page. They kick the door in, drag the past through gravel, and dare you to look away. This is Southern Gothic reborn in a shotgun blast of storytelling. Told through the voice of Locke Wood--a mythic outlaw-poet navigating trauma, addiction, lust, grief, class, legacy, and rebellion--the book becomes both a diary and a confession booth. Each piece is a scene. A pulse. A scar. And together they form a narrative stitched in pain, memory, and raw humanity. You'll walk through rusted trailer parks and roadside bars, tiptoe into motel bathrooms and bedrooms heavy with unspoken history. There are women with eyes like omens. Fathers who vanish behind the smoke. Friends who never made it out alive. There's whiskey and bone dust and the echo of one last fight before morning breaks. Structured like a cinematic spiral, Dixie Death Diary moves between poetic free verse, narrative prose, and fragmented memory. It's soaked in the red clay of the Carolinas and the haunted backroads of the Virginia coast. There are no safety nets here. Just cigarette burns, busted knuckles, and the beauty of the broken. Locke writes like Bukowski in a thunderstorm--part confession, part prophecy, and all heart. Think Southern noir meets outlaw gospel. A voice that blends the lyrical and the profane, the beautiful and the brutal. Whether he's describing the moment a lover walks out or the sound of a shotgun chambering in a dark garage, every line is alive with risk. And yet--beneath the grit--there's hope. Not the easy kind. Not redemption tied with a bow. But the hard-won kind you find in a stranger's eyes at 3 a.m. Or in the line of a poem that hits too close to home. It's the hope that someone might still be listening. Might still understand. This book is for the ones clawing for meaning after midnight. For those who've been pushed to the edge--and wrote their way back. For anyone who ever lit a fire just to feel something warm. DIXIE DEATH DIARY is a graveyard of Southern ghosts--and a resurrection of what refuses to die.