Home
Careful Not to Startle the Yaks
Barnes and Noble
Loading Inventory...
Careful Not to Startle the Yaks in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $15.00

Barnes and Noble
Careful Not to Startle the Yaks in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $15.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
It's impossible not to acknowledge Denis Garrison and Michael McClintock of Modern English Tanka, editors who had a profound influence on me as a writer, not least because they seemed to like my tanka. Of course, Sanford Goldstein's work with tanka sequences and strings was an inspiration, as was translator Carl Sesar's Takuboku: Poems to Eat, which was, fittingly, a gift from food writer John Thorne. Later, though I had written a few sequences, Marilyn Hazelton of Red Lights was an influence, spotting sequences in my submissions of individual tanka that I hadn't seen. And, of course, where would tanka prose in general be without Jeffrey Woodward's championing of the form in The Tanka Prose Anthology and the journal Modern Haibun & Tanka Prose? As soon as one starts thanking people, there is the risk of leaving someone out, which I don't want to do. M Kei of Atlas Poetica, Beverley George of Eucalypt, Claire Everett of Skylark were also encouraging editors. There were others. I would like to thank them and everyone who's encouraged the appreciation of tanka. And I would be remiss not to bow to the many wonderful writers of the form. The list of journals in the acknowledgements should indicate the scope of my gratitude.
It's impossible not to acknowledge Denis Garrison and Michael McClintock of Modern English Tanka, editors who had a profound influence on me as a writer, not least because they seemed to like my tanka. Of course, Sanford Goldstein's work with tanka sequences and strings was an inspiration, as was translator Carl Sesar's Takuboku: Poems to Eat, which was, fittingly, a gift from food writer John Thorne. Later, though I had written a few sequences, Marilyn Hazelton of Red Lights was an influence, spotting sequences in my submissions of individual tanka that I hadn't seen. And, of course, where would tanka prose in general be without Jeffrey Woodward's championing of the form in The Tanka Prose Anthology and the journal Modern Haibun & Tanka Prose? As soon as one starts thanking people, there is the risk of leaving someone out, which I don't want to do. M Kei of Atlas Poetica, Beverley George of Eucalypt, Claire Everett of Skylark were also encouraging editors. There were others. I would like to thank them and everyone who's encouraged the appreciation of tanka. And I would be remiss not to bow to the many wonderful writers of the form. The list of journals in the acknowledgements should indicate the scope of my gratitude.

















