Month: August 2017
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Daily Haiku: Aug. 12, 2017
Originally posted on Charlotte Digregorio's Writer's Blog: on the trail again . . . walking deeper into myself by Tom Clausen (USA) ?
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#haiku happenings #1 8/12/17: THF’s re:Virals 100
Up on THF, the latest re:Virals 100. https://www.thehaikufoundation.org/2017/08/11/revirals-100/
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Free-style Friday 8/11/17: Today, a #haiku sequence on a past neighborhood…
Webber Park Glimpses engine’s roar a race down Holland Avenue to catch that school bus growling black mut piercing pain of his teeth puncturing my butt spinning on the merry-go-round a walk past headstones swinging an old goodyear tied to an apple tree
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Haiku Happenings #2: Charlotte Digregorio’s Daily Haiku: Aug. 11, 2017
Originally posted on Charlotte Digregorio's Writer's Blog: darkness . . . her name slips into it by Dave Read (Canada) Touchstone Individual Poem Award, 2016
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#Haiku Happenings #1 8/11/17: The Slip-Realism Perception Challenge
Alan Summers explores the concept of slip-realism in this premier essay. the Gist: how do we perceive the world from the periphery of our senses? What would our haiku look like if we only used non visual imagery? Source: The Slip-Realism Perception Challenge
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ICYMI: my latest #Haibun #Poetry: Ascension | .@ImageCurve
Ascension BY FRANK J. TASSONE · 10TH AUGUST 2017 Haibun A flash of red. A cardinal perches high on a prematurely blossoming maple. He marks his territory, repeatedly singing the same crescendo. Moments later, he’s gone. No bird takes his place. Ides of March pine needles fluttering in the wind more by FRANK J. TASSONE photo by Jessica Furtney on Unsplash…
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#haiku happenings #2: the story behind This Interactive Periodic Table Features a Haiku for Each Element – Mental Floss
An interesting read. I admire the poet’s patience.
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#haiku in the news: UNESCO heritage status pursued for haiku – Chron.com
Lovers of haiku work to gain recognition in UNESCO’s heritage of intangibles. money quote: “Haiku is so short, but thanks to this feature, interest in it has been spreading worldwide, even among those who have never tried creating poems,” Akito Arima, president of the Haiku International Association, said during the press conference. The story here!