Showing posts with label Karen Jackson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karen Jackson. Show all posts

Friday, January 13, 2023

Hear Karen Luke Jackson Read "Finding Home"

Karen Luke Jackson, EdD

Randell Jones has included Karen Luke Jackson's story "Finding Home" about moving to the Garden Hamlet at Highland Lake" in his latest anthology, Twists and Turns.  If you'd like to listen to her read it, click here.

An oral history tradition, contemplative practices, and clown escapades provide a scaffolding for Karen Luke Jackson’s work. Whether crafting a poem, teaching a class, or serving as an Anam Cara, Karen searches for life-giving “role/soul” connections and helps others do the same. Stories, she says, provide an opening. They allow us to explore the core of our human experience and capture snippets of sacred mystery in everyday life.

An award-winning poet, Karen’s work has appeared in numerous journals including Broad River Review (Ron Rash Poetry Award), Ruminate (Janet McCabe Poetry Award, Honorable Mention), KestrelOneEmrys JournalFriends JournalChristian Feminism TodayenoTOWN MagazineThe Pisgah ReviewmoonShine reviewThe Great Smokies ReviewKakalak, and several anthologies. Karen is also the author of two poetry collections, The View Ever Changing exploring the power of place and family relationships and GRIT chronicling her sister’s life as Clancey the Clown. She is currently working on a memoir that spans six generations of a South Georgia family.

Karen holds a bachelor's degree in history from Valdosta State University, a master's in education from UNC-Chapel Hill, and a doctorate in education from North Carolina State University. She has served as executive director of two nonprofits, worked and taught in higher education, and for the past twenty years been a facilitator with the Center for Courage & Renewal. In that capacity, she has led workshops and retreats for groups throughout the Southeast, including a monastic community, clergy and hospital chaplains, Duke University’s advanced leadership program for nonprofits, churches, environmental activists, and interfaith groups.

 

Being a grandmother and living in a cottage adjoining a goat pasture in Western North Carolina are two of Karen’s greatest joys. When she’s not writing or companioning people on their spiritual journeys, she enjoys sitting on a porch nestled between pines and listening to bird song.

 


Monday, August 22, 2022

"Crop Dusters"

Karen Jackson's Poem Published in Susurrus

Karen Luke Jackson
"Crop Dusters," a poem about my mother and bluebirds, just appeared in the summer issue of Susurrus, a relatively new online journal that focuses on the American South.  Below are links to the poem and to the journal if you'd like to check it out. 

Crop Dusters 

Susurrus



Monday, March 15, 2021

Sweet Fruit by Karen Jackson

 Karen Jackson sent this news.

My short story "Sweet Fruit" about blackberry picking in South Georgia appeared today in the online journal Reckon Review.   Meagan Lucas, founder and editor, does a wonderful job featuring a different story each week, either fiction or creative nonfiction. If you have a "gritty" story about the South, you might want to check out the journal and consider submitting.

Here's a link to my story.  http://reckonreview.com/sweet-fruit/


I certainly related to Karen's story because I am a South Georgia native and picked many blackberries on the farm. GCB