About this item
Highlights
- Discover the beauty of haiku and be inspired to start your own haiku group!
- Kiriyama Prize (Nonfiction) 2007 3rd Winner
- About the Author: Abigail Friedman joined the Foreign Service in 1988 and served her country in Washington, Paris, Tokyo, the Azores and most recently as Consul General in Quebec City.
- 224 Pages
- Language + Art + Disciplines, Composition + Creative Writing
Description
About the Book
Discover the beauty of haiku and be inspired to start your own haiku group!
Book Synopsis
Discover the beauty of haiku and be inspired to start your own haiku group!
Review Quotes
"...A deft and seamless merging of genres: at once memoir, travel literature, and an unpretentious guide onto the terrain of Japanese poetry. It will appeal not just to poetry lovers, but to all readers who are curious about the world beyond their own borders."
-Foreword Magazine"Friedman is an appealing guide through an alternate Japan where modern people make poems about teacups and temples but also about skyscrapers and kidney surgery."
--East Bay Express"The book is not designed to make the reader a poet, but it does, perhaps, help us to pay more attention to our poetical eye."
--BiblioBuffet"The Haiku Apprentice gives the reader an original, thoughtful and personal glimpse of one expat's productive encounter with Japan."
--Metropolis"...Notable for its frankness and enthusiasm...Friedman has made a lively narrative out of the things she learned..."
--The Japan TimesAbout the Author
Abigail Friedman joined the Foreign Service in 1988 and served her country in Washington, Paris, Tokyo, the Azores and most recently as Consul General in Quebec City. She is a member of the Haiku Society of America and Haiku Canada. She is a founding member of the bilingual (French/English) Quebec Haiku Group in Quebec City. Michael Dylan Welch is a poet, editor, and publisher. More than 2.5K of his poems have appeared in hundreds of magazines in ten languages. He is president of the Tanka Society of America (which he founded in 2000), vice president of the Haiku Society of America, and vice president of the Eastside Writers Association.