Contemplating Chains [Haiku]

baby monkey
seems to contemplate chains,
or i anthropomorphize?

Russet Percher [Haiku]

the russet percher:
its look says "fast flyer," but 
its name says "good sitter"

Fisher [Haiku]

watching a duckling
hold a thrashing fish tightly,
i drop my corn chip

Snake on a Lake [Senryu]

the snake on the lake
swims with languid grace,
and i run without

BOOK REVIEW: Writing Haiku by Bruce Ross

Writing Haiku: A Beginner's Guide to Composing Japanese PoetryWriting Haiku: A Beginner’s Guide to Composing Japanese Poetry by Bruce Ross
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Amazon.in Page

Out: March 15, 2022

With this guide, Ross offers a compact guide to navigating Japanese poetic forms and the offshoots and variations that have evolved in America. The book does have a particular focus on the American and international style of haiku, and related forms, though the author always lays the groundwork by first exploring the “rules” of the traditional Japanese form. He also discusses concepts, such as wabi and sabi, that heavily inform Japanese poetry. However, most of the examples come from English language writers, and there’s extensive discussion of how American haiku differs in form and substance. This makes the book particularly useful for English-as-native-language writers who wish to capture the flavor of this spare and elegant poetic form, but who have limited acquaintance with the Japanese language and culture.

I didn’t think I’d need another guide for writing haiku after reading and re-reading William Higginson’s The Haiku Handbook, but Ross does cover a few topics in greater depth and detail, particular haiga (combining graphic arts with haiku,) renga (a partnered / team style) and several American variations, and ginko (a nature walk-based practice.)

The book has graphics as needed (i.e. in the haiga section,) and offers and extensive set of recommendations for further reading as well as resources.

While I’ve been writing haiku, tanka, and senryū for some time, I learned a lot from this book, and it got me excited to try some of the forms with which I’m inexperienced. I’d highly recommend this book for beginner, intermediate, and advanced haiku poets.


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Sloth Bear [Senryu]

turning towards one,
the sloth bear becomes
more bear than sloth

POEM: Leaky Roof [PoMo Day 22 – Senryū]

a leaky roof:
a man weighs patching it
against worrying

A Few Indian City Senryū

I
crossing the street
in Bangalore traffic —
never more alive

 

II
even in wee hours,
if I hear only silence,
I know I’m asleep

 

III
random backstreet:
yet, more color than a
carnival midway

Traveler’s Senryu

I
hold travel plans
like a stinky diaper —
not like a crowbar


II
the mountaintop
is always farther
than it looks


III
sorry Mr. Frost,
the less traveled road
is a deadend


IV
eat local food
cheeseburger in Shangri-la…
never sicker