Logo, MacQueen's Quinterly
Listed at Duotrope
MacQueen’s Quinterly: Knock-your-socks-off Art and Literature
Issue 28: April 2025
Poem: 142 words
By Robert L. Dean, Jr.

At the Zoo

 
It always astounds me how much 
the primate house looks like 
the old home place, back in the day. 

Uncle Charlie crouches on a boulder, 
smoking his pipe until feeding time. 
Aunt Fannie displays her proud red 

swollen butt. Mom picks lice 
from Dad’s silver hair as he circles round and round 
searching for his youth. Cousin Suzie saunters by, 

breasts budding beneath Led Zeppelin tee shirt. 
Brother and I howl and mug, scratch our balls 
and wonder what the hell is going on down there. 

Long-haired Screech pulls up on a Harley 
and roars towards the croc pool, 
looking to raise a little hell. And then 

you hook my arm and steer us toward 
the giraffe habitat, head held high, 
calves in tow. Your laugh rings out 

like Suzie’s as I swivel round 
and snap a family portrait. 
Robert L. Dean, Jr.
Issue 28 (April 2025)

is the author of Pulp (Finishing Line Press, 2022); The Aerialist Will Not Be Performing, ekphrastic poems and short fictions in response to the art of Steven Schroeder (Turning Plow Press, 2020); and At the Lake with Heisenberg (Spartan Press, 2018). His book of ekphrastic poems and flash fictions, The Night Window, written to photographs by Jason Baldinger, is forthcoming.

Dean’s work has been nominated multiple times for the Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net, and has appeared or is forthcoming in: Chiron Review; The Ekphrastic Review; Flint Hills Review; Heartland! Poetry of Love, Resistance & Solidarity; I-70 Review; Illya’s Honey; KYSO Flash; MacQueen’s Quinterly; Midwest Quarterly; MockingHeart Review; October Hill Magazine; Red River Review; River City Poetry; Sheila-Na-Gig online; Shot Glass; Suisun Valley Review; Synkroniciti; Thorny Locust; Waco WordFest Anthology 2022; and the Wichita Broadside Project.

A native Kansan, Dean studied music composition with Dr. Walter Mays at Wichita State University before going on the road as a bass player, conductor, and arranger; he was a professional musician for 30 years, playing with acts such as Jesse Lopez, Bo Didley, Frank Sinatra Jr., Vic Damone, Jim Stafford, Kenny Rankin, B. W. Stevenson, and the Dallas Jazz Orchestra. And he put in a stint with the house band at the Fairmont Hotel Venetian Room in Dallas. While living in Dallas, he also worked 20 years for The Dallas Morning News and made the transition from music to writing before moving back to Kansas in 2007.

Dean is a member of The Writers Place and the Kansas Authors Club. He lives in Augusta, Kansas, midway between the Air Capital of the World and the Flint Hills.

More on the Web: By, About, and Beyond

Crosswalk Jesus: A Moment in Four Facets, prose poem by Robert L. Dean, Jr. published in MacQueen’s Quinterly (Issue 25, September 2024) and nominated for Best Small Fictions 2025

At the Lake with Schrödinger’s Cat, poem by Dean published in MacQ (Issue 21, January 2024) and nominated for the Pushcart Prize

Breath of the Lord, ekphrastic poem by Dean after a photograph by Jason Baldinger, published in MacQ (Issue 19, August 2023) and nominated for Best Spiritual Literature 2024

Finding the Door: One Writer’s Approach to Ekphrasis, an essay on craft by Robert L. Dean, Jr. in MacQ (Issue 13, May 2022)

Windmill, ekphrastic poem inspired by Dean’s maternal grandfather, published in KYSO Flash (Issue 11, Spring 2019) and nominated for the Pushcart Prize.

Metal Man, ekphrastic poem inspired by a 1955 photograph of Dean’s paternal grandfather in the Boeing machine shop, published in The Ekphrastic Review (28 July 2018) and nominated for Best of the Net

Llama, 1957, ekphrastic haibun by Robert L. Dean, Jr. inspired by Inge Morath’s photograph A Llama in Times Square, published in The Ekphrastic Review (13 January 2018)

Hopper and Dean: Interview and poems in River City Poetry (Fall 2017)

 
 
Copyright © 2019-2025 by MacQueen’s Quinterly and by those whose works appear here.
Logo and website designed and built by Clare MacQueen; copyrighted © 2019-2025.
Data collection, storage, assimilation, or interpretation of this publication, in whole
or in part, for the purpose of AI training are expressly forbidden, no exceptions.
⚡   Please report broken links to: MacQuinterly [at] gmail [dot] com   ⚡

At MacQ, we take your privacy seriously. We do not collect, sell, rent, or exchange your name and email address, or any other information about you, to third parties for marketing purposes. When you contact us, we will use your name and email address only in order to respond to your questions, comments, etc.