Four Haiku Published in Bear Creek Haiku

The journal Bear Creek Haiku has published four of my haiku in its August 2020 issue. The editor is Ayaz Daryl Nielsen, assisted by people and two cats. I have been revising many of my haiku to shorten them, and I'm pleased that these four have found a good home. Photo of Janet Ruth Heller by Diane Joy Schmidt

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Haiku Poem Forthcoming in the Journal Frogpond

The haiku journal Frogpond has accepted a haiku poem of mine for publication. The editor is Michael Ketchek. Although Japanese haiku are usually 17 syllables long and divided 5-7-5, current literary theory insists that haiku written in English should be much shorter. So my accepted haiku poem is only 9 syllables long and divided 3-3-3. Margaret Sturr, my senior honors English teacher in high school, introduced our class to haiku during our 1966-1967 academic year. I like this form because it forces a writer to be very concise and to eliminate any unnecessary words. I have read a lot of traditional and modern haiku poems to understand this genre of literature better. I think that the effort to be more concise has improved my writing. Janet Ruth Heller reading her poems at the Kalamazoo Public Library. Photo by Hedy Habra.

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