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haiku | haiku

richard-zimler's picture
Jul.25.2012
"Love's Voice" is a doorway to kabbalah for readers at all levels of experience.  Acclaimed novelist Richard Zimler uses the form of haiku to distill kabbalistic philosophy into its most poetic forms, providing a rare and deeply affectiving experience to the reader.  The seventy-two...
ram-krishna-singh's picture
May.23.2012
The book is a collection of some new and selected 53 regular poems, 41 tanka and 39 haiku to provide a glimpse of R.K.Singh's poetry published over the last three decades.  The Indian English poet has already brought out 14 volumes, including  My Silence and Other Selected Poems (1996),...
leza-lowitz's picture
Mar.20.2011
These sixty poems on the Buddha's six "perfections," or qualities for a meaningful life—generosity, kindness, patience, joy, stillness, wisdom—were written over years of yoga and meditation practice, inspired by Tibetan Heart Yoga, nature, Buddhism, Osho, Tantra, ancient Japanese and Chinese poetry...
john-parker-oughton's picture
Aug.04.2010
Drawn from the author's 60-year journey through the Middle East, Japan, and North America, this collection of poems offers a variety of engaging styles, ranging from sonnets to haiku to free-form experimentation, while considering the implications of technology, science, and nature in the context...
leza-lowitz's picture
Sep.23.2008
A thousand years ago, Japanese women court poets created a written aesthetic of unmatchcd elegance and technical skill. Today, Japanese women poets write with equal sophistication in haiku and tanka about romance, family life, sexuality, divorce, loneliness, politics and the West. This first-ever...
joel-derfner's picture
Jun.05.2008
robin-d-gill's picture
Feb.09.2008
900+ translated haiku, all on the sea cucumber and most over a hundred years old, with a good measure of natural history. You might know about Ponge and his object poems, but the sea cucumber, a featureless and formless (protean) animal without a ganglia of brain, is the ultimate "thing,...
kari-anne-roy's picture
Jan.14.2008
This collection of irreverent haiku explores the reality of modern motherhood—complete with dirty diapers, spilled Spaghetti Os, obnoxious purple dinosaurs, carseats, strollers, choking hazards, and more. It’s the perfect gift for new moms with young children at home—a book that can be picked up...