top of page

​02-17-2024

Chiwan Choi

 

THE RIFT

 

there was a horse

on the unpaved road

and a man and a carriage

full of watermelons

 

he called for us all of us—

wheels clacking as he rode

his horse drawn carriage

calling for us

 

there was a boy

on a red brick wall

his feet dangling high in the air

above the sidewalk

 

he watched this strange world—

slapping his knees

with his small hands

and asked the man to stay

 

more than four decades later

the boy was now a man or

that thing closer to death

asking the boy to stay

 

on the wall

dangling feet

calling for him

 

to jump

to jump into his arms

to jump into his future

to jump into the confusion to come

 

calling for him

 

to jump

to jump into terror

to jump into his life

 

calling for me

calling for me

calling for me

 

to find my way

back

home

 

KITE

 

give me your hand

i will recognize it by its rhymes

 

a fraction of what it was

when i thought it could hold up

the earth and the moon

and everything and the sun

 

give me your hand

i still recognize it by its regrets

 

let your skin

slip away from you

and i will build a roof

and walls around

your bones

 

give me your hand

i will call it home

 

and imagine my own family

a daughter pointing at a photo of you

holding me in your right arm

 

give me your hand

hold it still like the mountain

 

when we’d go visit grandpa

and i held out my hand

until the dragonfly

landed on my outstretched finger

 

you showed me

how to tie the string to its tail

and watched it flap its wings

 

and hover in front of me

 

a kite, i said

and held the string

and ran around grandpa’s grave

as you shook your head

your lips moving to mutter

a secret to god

 

give me your hand

i want to hold you

 

like this

in front of me

 

fly

dad

 

fly

 

FLIGHT

 

the temperature

won’t go down at all

 

i have taken enough drugs

to imagine a less confusing life

 

it involves a lot of forgetting

but that part started long ago

 

we can’t leave home without damage

your absence alters the landscape

 

there’s a man next to me

who toasts with an empty cup

 

what can he possibly know

about my visions of burning castles

 

of hecate

and her wolves

 

what could he really know

about the storms trapped in my knees

 

voices are smoke on the verge of flight

i can almost taste your name in it

 

could i convince you to pause your travel

and rest on the shiver of my forearm

 

because i am high and i am tree and i am

wondering if there’s a point in my breaking

 

where the dying

sounds like living

-from Sky Songs, selected by PoemoftheWeek.com Spring 2025 Guest Editor, Lee Herrick

I am a poet, writer and publisher, author of four full length books of poetry—The Flood (Tia Chucha Press, 2010), and the Daughter Trilogy: Abductions (Writ Large Press, 2012), and The Yellow House (CCM, 2017) & my name is wolf (2022) – and multiple poetry chapbooks, including Time Out of Space and lo/fidelity lovesongs.

I wrote, presented, and destroyed the novel Ghostmaker throughout the course of 2015, as part of my ongoing examination on the meaning of a book, with the audience tasked in remembering and recreating a work that has disappeared and in turn creating a new version of a book that never really existed.

I have published my poetry, fiction and essays in numerous journals and magazines, including The New York Times Magazine, ONTHEBUS, Poem-A-Day, Entropy, cream city review, Mud City Journal, chaparral, Twelfth House, Spiral Orb, Zocalo Public Square, Esquire, Maura Magazine, and the anthologies Resist Much/Obey Little and ATTN. I have been the subject of features on KCET, LA Weekly, Cosmonaut Magazine and OTHRPPL. I was even a librettist for the opera Songs and Dances of Imaginary Lands, produced by Overtone Industries!

I am a partner at Writ Large Press and the Editor at Cultural Daily.

Oh. I also host the paranormal podcast with a literary twist, Are You There, Ghost? It’s Me, Chiwan.

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
bottom of page