Librarian’s Cache: Ty Hadman on Helen Chenoweth
Foundation Librarian Garry Eaton highlights Ty Hadman’s essay on haiku pioneer Helen Chenoweth.
Book of the Week: The Haijin’s Tweed Coat
See how many titles you recognize in Michael Dylan Welch‘s homage to haiku journals.
Book of the Week: Butterfly Breezes
This unusual work is “a one-time anthology,” a collection of butterfly poems from nearly all the top haiku poets of its day, the early 1980s . . .
re:Virals 15
Matthew Moffett takes us across the border in reading Scott Wiggerman’s powerful haiku.
Book of the Week: Sailing Bones
Raymond Roseliep’s was an early, poetic voice that helped stretch the boundaries to allow our non-Japanese ethos to enter the form . . .
It’s Getting Late — Nominate your book for a 2015 Touchstone Award!
Enter your book of haiku into consideration for a 2015 Touchstone Distinguished Books Award.
Book of the Week: Haiku
Rod Willmot’s hand-lettered early poems have stood the test of time, and you’ll find some of his best-known poems here . . .
THF Galleries: Haiga of Ron C. Moss
Ron’s work is familiar not only through his haiga but also his book covers
It’s Getting Late — Nominate your favorite haiku for the 2015 Touchstone Awards today!
Nominate your best poem from 2015, and that of a fellow poet, for a Touchstone Award.
THF Galleries: Image Haiku of Marlene Mountain
Marlene’s work was always strongly inflected by her art school background
Book of the Week: Jazztronaut
Geert Verbeke has plied his idiosyncratic notions of haiku and tanka in dozens of books, but nowhere better than when he takes on the theme of music, as here . . .
Librarian’s Cache: The Haiku Aesthetics of Dietmar Tauchner
THF Digital Librarian Garry Eaton highlights an essay by Austrian poet Dietmar Tauchner.
Book of the Week: small town
The trope of life in a small town as a subject for haiku dates to feudal Japan, and includes Hoyt, Spiess and now tripi among its adopters . . .
The Renku Sessions: “A Bowl of Cherries”
Linda Papanicolaou summarizes our third completed renku session, “A Bowl of Cherries.”
