Issue 24: | 30 Aug. 2024 |
Poem: | 58 words |
+ Visual Art: | Photograph |
This one tree in the field stays rooted as the wind turns dust into starlings, shifting shapes in the sky. This tree lifts its branches as if they were wings, poised to fly, follow the wind. But wings turn into hands reaching up to cradle the face of the unknown.
—After Winged Tree by Christopher Woods:
is a writer and photographer who lives in Texas. His monologue show, Twelve from Texas, was performed recently in NYC by Equity Library Theatre. His poetry collection, Maybe Birds Would Carry It Away, is forthcoming from Kelsay Books, which also published his chapbook What Comes, What Goes. In addition, he’s the author of a novella, Hearts in the Dark (published in Running Wild Novella Anthology, Volume 4, Book 1; 2020); a collection of brief fictions and prose poems, Under a Riverbed Sky (Panther Creek Press, 2001); a book of stage monologues for actors, Heart Speak (Stone River Press, 2002); and a Young Adult novel set in 1943, Dream Patch (Corona Publishing, 1985).
His work has appeared in hundreds of publications, with writing in Another Chicago Magazine, The Galway Review, Glimmer Train, New England Review, New Orleans Review, Phantom Kangaroo, and The Southern Review, among numerous others; and photographs in 2 Bridges Review, Bracken, Longridge Review, Oxford Magazine (Issue 45), Pank, Peacock Journal, San Pedro River Review, Streetlight Magazine, Tiferet Journal, and Young Ravens Literary Review, among many others. Woods has received residencies from The Ucross Foundation and the Edward Albee Foundation, and a grant from the Mary Roberts Rinehart Foundation.
Artist’s online portfolio:
https://christopherwoods.zenfolio.com/f861509283
⚡ The Photographs of Christopher Woods, photo-essay in Street Light Magazine (5 April 2024)
⚡ Ghost Happy Hour, prose poem by Woods in Phantom Kangaroo (Issue 22, January 2016)
⚡ Final Appointment, flash-length play by Woods in KYSO Flash (Issue 2, Winter 2015)
is a Contributing Editor of MacQueen’s Quinterly. His poetry and haiga have appeared, or are forthcoming, in various literary reviews and anthologies, including Chaos Dive Reunion (Mutabilis Press, 2023); contemporary haibun (Volume 17, Red Moon Press, 2022); Concho River Review, Sulphur River, Texas Poetry Calendar; The Ekphrastic Review; and Visions International.
Two of his ekphrastic poems appear in Silent Waters, photographs by George Digalakis (Athens, 2017). He is the author of two chapbooks, Standing Inside the Web (Bear House Publishing, 1990) and Fire and Shadows (Legal Studies Forum, 2008). His poems “Black Dogs” and “Viewing the Dead” were nominated for Pushcart Prizes.
⚡ Out of the Haze, collaborative haiga with photograph by George Digalakis and poem by Gary S. Rosin in MacQueen’s Quinterly (Issue 8, June 2021); nominated for, and selected for publication in, Contemporary Haibun 17 (Red Moon Press, 2022)
⚡ Featured Poet: Gary S. Rosin in MacQueen’s Quinterly (Issue 7, March 2021)
⚡ Crossing Kansas in The Wild Word (7 February 2020); includes audio of Rosin reading his poem
⚡ Two Readings: “Apparition” and “Black Dogs” by Gary S. Rosin for Texas Poetry Calendar 2015 at the Blue Willow Bookshop in Houston, Texas (20 September 2014).
See also Black Dogs here in MacQ (Issue 12, March 2022), which was nominated in October 2022 by MacQ for the 48th annual Pushcart Prize (2024 edition).
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