Joseph Woods
Quick Facts
Biography
Joseph Woods (born 1966) is an Irish poet born in Drogheda, Ireland. He now lives in Harare, Zimbabwe with his wife and daughter and where he works as a poet, writer and editor.
Life
Born in 1966 he studied biology and chemistry and worked for periods as an industrial chemist, teacher and school principal. He was awarded an MA in poetry (Lancaster University) under the direction of James Simmons. Widely travelled, he lived and worked in Kyoto, Japan in the early 1990s and travelled for long periods in Asia, in particular China and India and later in Latin America.
He was a dynamic Director of Poetry Ireland, the national organisation for the support and promotion of poets and poetry from 2001 to 2013. Moving with his family to Yangon, Myanmar in the summer of 2013, they lived there until post democratic elections at the end of 2015. In January 2016, his family moved to Harare, Zimbabwe and where they continue to live.
Woods has published four collections of poetry and for his first, Sailing to Hokkaido (Worple Press, 2001) he won the Patrick Kavanagh Poetry Award. Dedalus Press reissued Woods's first two poetry collections (Worple Press, UK) in one volume entitled Cargo (2010) and have published his work since. His third collection Ocean Letters (2011) was translated into Hungarian by Tomas Kabdebó and awarded the Irodalmi Jelen Prize in 2013. Based in part of his experiences of living in Burma, Dedalus Press published the critically acclaimed, Monsoon Diary in 2018.
He has edited numerous poetry publications, he co-edited with Irene de Angelis Our Shared Japan (Dedalus Press 2007) an anthology of contemporary Irish poetry concerning Japan with an accompanying essay by Seamus Heaney. With Gerard Smyth he co-edited The Poetry Project, a web anthology of visual artists and filmmakers interpreting selected poems. He is consulting editor to the Irish poetry journal Cyphers and has edited anthologies of Burmese and Zimbabwean poetries for the journal.
In 2014 and again in 2019, Woods was a recipient of the Katherine and Patrick Kavanagh Fellowship and in 2016 he was awarded an Arts Council of Ireland Literature Bursary towards the development of Monsoon Diary.
In Zimbabwe, Woods edited and was a contributing writer for The Mashonaland Irish Association, A Miscellany, 1891-2019; Weaver Press, Harare, 2019. The book traced through the oldest expatriate Irish organisation in Africa, a history of the Irish in Rhodesia and Zimbabwe.
Woods has read widely and selected venues and festivals include, Aldeburgh Poetry Festival, Clifden Arts Week, Dublin Writers’ Festival, Medellín International Poetry Festival, Marché de la Poésie, Paris, Irrawaddy Literary Festival (Mandalay), Iowa Book Fair , Ubud (Bali) Writers & Readers Festival, Irish Arts Centre, New York; Marina Tsvetaeva House, Moscow; Nabokov House, St. Petersburgand Cúirt International Festival of Literature, and Franschhoek Literary Festivalin South Africa.
Woods is a contributor and reviewer to numerous newspapers and journals including, The Irish Times, The Myanmar Times, Dublin Review of Books, The Mekong Review, Poetry Ireland Review etc.
Poetry Books
- Sailing to Hokkaido, (Worple Press, 2001)
- Bearings, (Worple Press, Dublin, 2005)
- Cargo, (Dedalus Press, Dublin, 2010)
- Ocean Letters, (Dedalus Press, Dublin, 2011)
- Óceán Levelek, (Irodalmi Jelen Könyvek, Budapest, 2012)
- Monsoon Diary, (Dedalus Press, Dublin, 2018)
- Our Shared Japan, (Eds. Irene de Angelis & Joseph Woods, Afterword by Seamus Heaney), (Dedalus Press, Dublin, 2007)
Non-Fiction
- The Mashonaland Irish Association, A Miscellany, 1891-2019, edited by Joseph Woods (Weaver Press, Harare, 2019)