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Himalayan Pink Salt: Closest I'll Get to Everest: Haiku and Micro Poems
Himalayan Pink Salt: Closest I'll Get to Everest: Haiku and Micro Poems
Himalayan Pink Salt: Closest I'll Get to Everest: Haiku and Micro Poems
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Himalayan Pink Salt: Closest I'll Get to Everest: Haiku and Micro Poems

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Hanoch Guy Kaner calls these poems "micro-poems," and as such they need not be subject to or constrained by comparisons with English approximations of 'haiku' nor the conventions that govern such according to any given arbiter of what and what is not––if anything is, a 'haiku' in English. Still, these poems may be read as Hanoch Guy Kaner's own sense of what a 'haiku-like' poem in English can and may do. For, Hanoch Guy Kaner is a polymorphous poet; he is polymorphous-in-verse. Through an imaginative empathetic resonance, and because he is polymorphous poetic, he has intuited (from within, and because of, his own poetry writing) something Basho taught: “When you use words as kireji, every word becomes kireji. When you do not use words as kireji, there are no words which are kireji. From this point, grasp the very depth of the nature of kireji on your own.” These micro-poems use words as kireji; thus every word of them has become kireji. These poems are written in, call it, the 'disjunctive tense'––"the now, the here, through which all future plunges to the past," as Joyce wrote. Each line of a poem is disjunctive, working with and against itself, with and against those lines before and after. The poem is not trying to 'be in the moment' while trying not to be 'caught' in remembering the past (that illusory, false impasse), no. These are poems of "afterwards-ness," nochdemkeyt, the after-now, the recollected-present, awakening the moment-after. For Hanoch Guy Kaner, each of these poems is a haiku d'état, a "finale of seem." They are too, sometimes, what the poet Rachel Bluwstein named, "flowers of Maybe." From this point, Hanoch Guy Kaner invites us to grasp the very depth of the nature of "the now, the here" on our own.

--Robert G. Margolis
LanguageEnglish
PublisherAuthorHouse
Release dateMar 31, 2022
ISBN9781665556132
Himalayan Pink Salt: Closest I'll Get to Everest: Haiku and Micro Poems
Author

Hanoch Guy Kaner

Hanoch Guy, Ph.D., Ed.D., spent his childhood and youth in Israel surrounded by citrus orchards, watermelon fields and invading sand dunes. He is a bilingual poet in Hebrew and English. Hanoch is emeritus professor of Jewish and Hebrew literature at Temple University specializing in Holocaust literature.. He has mentored and taught poetry classes at the Musehouse center in Philadelphia. Hanoch has published poetry extensively in the US, Israel , the UK, Greece.and Wales. His poems published in Genre, Poetry Newsletter, Tracks, the International Journal of Genocide S tudies, Poetry Motel, Visions International, and Voices Israel and many more, He has won awards for Poetica and Mad Poets Society. Terra Treblinka was a finalist in the Northbook contest. He has won first prize in Better than Starbuck Haiku .contest. Hanoch Guy is the author of eleven poetry books

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