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Wholesale Paper Boats: a book of haiku - Paperback
Wholesale Paper Boats: a book of haiku - Paperback
Wholesale Paper Boats: a book of haiku - Paperback
Wholesale Paper Boats: a book of haiku - Paperback
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Description
by Tom Bierovic (Author) You may have been introduced to haiku in elementary or middle school by a well-meaning teacher who told you that haiku is a type of poem from Japan, set in nature, and written in three lines of five, seven, and five syllables. However, haiku is really more challenging, more subtle, and more intriguing than just saying something 'poetic' about nature in three lines and 17 syllables. Haiku focus on a specific moment that catches the poet's attention and that sparks an imaginative leap - a haiku moment. Today, most haiku written in English (and many other languages throughout the world) are shorter than the traditional 17 syllables, and although most are still written in three lines, it's not unusual to see a haiku presented in just one or two lines. Here's one of Tom Bierovic's haiku from Paper Boats gathering clouds in the pelican's beak a PB&J In this haiku, perhaps a person decided to leave the beach when the sky became increasingly cloudy and left a sandwich behind as a treat for the pelican, evoking in the reader a mixed feeling of disappointment due to the gathering clouds but delight in the pelican's good fortune. Or perhaps a person's attention was so focused on looking for shapes in the clouds that she didn't notice a pelican stealing her sandwich, evoking a feeling of wistfulness or loss. And maybe, since it's a PB&J, the person is a child. If so, is the child sad because his family is leaving the beach due to the gathering clouds? Is the child delighted because a pelican accepted a sandwich from her hand, or is she mad because she's still hungry? A good haiku leaves the reader with something to think about. Of course, a reader might interpret a haiku differently than the poet intended or experience a different feeling than the one the poet tried to evoke. In haiku, a lot is left to the reader's imagination; in fact, the best haiku are unfinished until the reader adds what's sometimes called the fourth line- his or her own creative leap only hinted at by the poem itself. Here's another of Tom's haiku from Paper Boats: melting icicle a sparrow showers drip by drip This poem won Runner-up in the British Haiku Society's awards contest for 2019 and was published in the prestigious journal, Blithe Spirit. Contest judge David Lanoue, offered this commentary about the poem: The 'melting icicle' haiku is exquisite in its observation and suggestiveness of feeling. One drip at a time, the sparrow patiently showers: shaking its head (I imagine), ruffling its feathers, and then waiting for more.
Details
SKU: 9798664463712 Made in United States Weight: 95.25 g (3.36 oz) EAN: 9798664463712












