This Rough Magic

$10.00

This Rough Magic, a work dedicated to the author’s father, who died in 2025, addresses common themes of memory, familial relationships, forgiveness, loss, and bereavement with the impetus to find meaning in the mundane aspects of our quotidian lives. A central poem of the work, “Prodigal,” has been nominated by Apricity Press for a Pushcart Prize. deSouza employs a wide spectrum of approaches in his poetry, including astonishing linguistic and formal innovation, dialogue with established poetic tradition, and a compelling use of ekphrastic reference. It is a work of lyric invention that both entertains on first reading and yet rewards rereadings. The music of verse is a central aspect of the collection, where deSouza asks us to listen for the "singsong spell of now," and in doing so be present in the moment, as he affirms “Now is all there is—”

Praise for This Rough Magic

In a voice both sagacious and enchanting, John A. deSouza’s This Rough Magic reminds us, gently, that “Now is all there is.” In here are all things green and golden. deSouza’s language is abundant and lush, his words pooling up from the deepest wells of human emotion and experience in “hooks of remembering, sickles of sense” that instantly bewitch the reader. Each poem flows and reflects, full of light, into a kaleidoscope of our sacred things. This Rough Magic hums with an internal music that sparkles and captivates. Like the soundtrack to a searching heart, this collection sates the soul with a rich, sensory feast that urges us to open ourselves, to listen and to resonate.

Danielle McMahon, is the author of irl

This Rough Magic by John A. deSouza is a powerful collection exploring aging, memory, loss, and grief—where “every transformation is a kind of dying,” and “at the heart of knowledge is a broad and sunny sea / of naps.” Tender and unflinching, these poems find light even as they reckon with what fades.

Leah Huete de Maines, Poet-in-Residence Emerita at Northern Kentucky University

You can almost smell the musk of the earth as John tills a garden of memories to name feelings and a “flailing love that only words collapse.” There are tender moments as he comes to terms with the aging of his parents and finding forgiveness. “Watching the last swallows as twilight…seeps / downward to dusk,” he faces his own mortality and finds acceptance in remembering their stories.

Susan Kier, poetry editor at WayWords Literary Journal

In This Rough Magic, John A. deSouza’s poems fold back and forth in time, contemplating mortality, loss, and intersections of the human psyche and the natural world. The poems layer sparkling language-play over whispered questions about the nature of grief and the place of poetic voice in the world. At the core of this collection, a poem such as “Prodigal” offers a simple and moving meditation on forgiveness. Amidst his resonant imagery, deSouza also offers surprises we would do well to consider more deeply, even as we chuckle: “At the heart of knowledge is a broad and sunny sea/of naps.”

Lea Marshall, author of The Slow Hammer of Roots

A beautiful new collection filled with sunshine and shadow, past and present. John A. deSouza's poems offer a stillness and lyric introspection much needed in this age of fragmented attention. These poems do not rush; they walk beneath trees, wander through seasons, visit places real and remembered—all of it “frail with majestic life.” The opening poem asks, “So how connect / this to that?” And this is the rough magic contained within these pages: the connective tissue of love, of memory, “of a thing gone right.”

Juliana Woodward, poetry editor at The Writing Disorder

About the Author

John A. deSouza is the author of Concord Ave. Georgics (Broadstone Books, forthcoming 2027) and four chapbooks: Hidden, a sequence of poems addressing the war in Ukraine (Bottlecap Press), Labyrinth (Bainbridge Island Press), This Rough Magic (Rockwood Press) and In the Garden (Finishing Line Press, forthcoming). He was shortlisted for the Letter Review Prize for Unimaginable Hardship, poems for Ukraine (2024). John has recently been featured in Poetry Salzburg Review. His poem, “Prodigal,” has been nominated for a 2025 Pushcart Prize. He has upcoming poems in The Dalhousie Review, The Courtship of Winds, and Abstract Magazine.

John is a graduate of the University of Toronto with a B.A. in English and has been a resident of Jersey City for over a decade where he lives with his wife, Oksana, whose family is of Ukrainian origin.

Details

Title: This Rough Magic

Author: John A. deSouza

Publisher: Rockwood Press

Released: 2026 - April

Format: chapbook, acid-free paper, silk cover

Pages: 52

Price: $10

ISBN: 978-1-59498-227-9

This Rough Magic, a work dedicated to the author’s father, who died in 2025, addresses common themes of memory, familial relationships, forgiveness, loss, and bereavement with the impetus to find meaning in the mundane aspects of our quotidian lives. A central poem of the work, “Prodigal,” has been nominated by Apricity Press for a Pushcart Prize. deSouza employs a wide spectrum of approaches in his poetry, including astonishing linguistic and formal innovation, dialogue with established poetic tradition, and a compelling use of ekphrastic reference. It is a work of lyric invention that both entertains on first reading and yet rewards rereadings. The music of verse is a central aspect of the collection, where deSouza asks us to listen for the "singsong spell of now," and in doing so be present in the moment, as he affirms “Now is all there is—”

Praise for This Rough Magic

In a voice both sagacious and enchanting, John A. deSouza’s This Rough Magic reminds us, gently, that “Now is all there is.” In here are all things green and golden. deSouza’s language is abundant and lush, his words pooling up from the deepest wells of human emotion and experience in “hooks of remembering, sickles of sense” that instantly bewitch the reader. Each poem flows and reflects, full of light, into a kaleidoscope of our sacred things. This Rough Magic hums with an internal music that sparkles and captivates. Like the soundtrack to a searching heart, this collection sates the soul with a rich, sensory feast that urges us to open ourselves, to listen and to resonate.

Danielle McMahon, is the author of irl

This Rough Magic by John A. deSouza is a powerful collection exploring aging, memory, loss, and grief—where “every transformation is a kind of dying,” and “at the heart of knowledge is a broad and sunny sea / of naps.” Tender and unflinching, these poems find light even as they reckon with what fades.

Leah Huete de Maines, Poet-in-Residence Emerita at Northern Kentucky University

You can almost smell the musk of the earth as John tills a garden of memories to name feelings and a “flailing love that only words collapse.” There are tender moments as he comes to terms with the aging of his parents and finding forgiveness. “Watching the last swallows as twilight…seeps / downward to dusk,” he faces his own mortality and finds acceptance in remembering their stories.

Susan Kier, poetry editor at WayWords Literary Journal

In This Rough Magic, John A. deSouza’s poems fold back and forth in time, contemplating mortality, loss, and intersections of the human psyche and the natural world. The poems layer sparkling language-play over whispered questions about the nature of grief and the place of poetic voice in the world. At the core of this collection, a poem such as “Prodigal” offers a simple and moving meditation on forgiveness. Amidst his resonant imagery, deSouza also offers surprises we would do well to consider more deeply, even as we chuckle: “At the heart of knowledge is a broad and sunny sea/of naps.”

Lea Marshall, author of The Slow Hammer of Roots

A beautiful new collection filled with sunshine and shadow, past and present. John A. deSouza's poems offer a stillness and lyric introspection much needed in this age of fragmented attention. These poems do not rush; they walk beneath trees, wander through seasons, visit places real and remembered—all of it “frail with majestic life.” The opening poem asks, “So how connect / this to that?” And this is the rough magic contained within these pages: the connective tissue of love, of memory, “of a thing gone right.”

Juliana Woodward, poetry editor at The Writing Disorder

About the Author

John A. deSouza is the author of Concord Ave. Georgics (Broadstone Books, forthcoming 2027) and four chapbooks: Hidden, a sequence of poems addressing the war in Ukraine (Bottlecap Press), Labyrinth (Bainbridge Island Press), This Rough Magic (Rockwood Press) and In the Garden (Finishing Line Press, forthcoming). He was shortlisted for the Letter Review Prize for Unimaginable Hardship, poems for Ukraine (2024). John has recently been featured in Poetry Salzburg Review. His poem, “Prodigal,” has been nominated for a 2025 Pushcart Prize. He has upcoming poems in The Dalhousie Review, The Courtship of Winds, and Abstract Magazine.

John is a graduate of the University of Toronto with a B.A. in English and has been a resident of Jersey City for over a decade where he lives with his wife, Oksana, whose family is of Ukrainian origin.

Details

Title: This Rough Magic

Author: John A. deSouza

Publisher: Rockwood Press

Released: 2026 - April

Format: chapbook, acid-free paper, silk cover

Pages: 52

Price: $10

ISBN: 978-1-59498-227-9