I’ve been busy preparing for my class for next week’s Port Townsend Writer’s Conference. It’s on haiku and haibun, so I’m getting exercises together, finding examples and definitions, etc. I’m really loving Sam Hamill’s translation of Basho’s Narrow Road to the Interior. Basho is all poetry-biz gossip and allusion to classic Japanese literature in his haibun – surprising, right? – and Sam’s language captures his tone very well, I think.
I did have a fun break on the 4th – husband G and I got to have brunch with one of my favorite inspirations, poet Denise Duhamel and her husband Nick Carbo, who were in Seattle for like half a day, and then go to local poetry bookstore Open Books, where we met up with fellow Pacific U MFA alum Jennifer Whetham. Denise is just as animated and sweet as her poems might indicate. Then G and I watched some fireworks, just like old times.
In the next week, we have our fourteenth (!!) anniversary, G’s 37th birthday, and of course, the aforementioned PT Writer’s Conference. Too much stuff going on at once!
In good news, we saw a mother sea otter with two babies yesterday, and a multitude of seals. We keep showing up at the beach at 9 PM, and the aquatic mammals keep putting on a show! Better than those expensive aquariums by far 🙂 And I think Port Townsend’s deer are multiplying…
I’ve finally written some new poems in a series I’ve been thinking about for a while now, tentatively called “The Robot Scientist’s Daughter.” Not sure if they’re supposed to be part of one of the books I’m working on, or their own thing. Either way, after a bit of a dry writing spell, yay!
Justin Evans
I have two haibun in my book manuscript, strategically placed as interior book-ends.
jeannine
Thanks Justin! I’ve been working with the haibun form too.
You know, this would be a good time for everyone to post links to their favorite haibun and haiku…
Nurse Fusion
Hey, this is totally random but
FYI the link from Crab Creek blog to your page doesn’t work (I broke up the link so you can see it in comments): http://crabcreek.blogspot.com/
2007/10/roots-and-writers-reading-
october-23.html
Jeannine Hall Gailey
Fixed it, Julie! Thanks!
sam of the ten thousand things
Hamill’s translation is wonderful. Narrow Road is, for me, one of the most important books ever written.
Hope the conference goes well, Jeannine.